Saturday, September 5, 2015

Rye Saison IIa

This was the second beer to come out of the kettle on my first brewday back. This was a competition rebrew of my rye saison from this past winter, so not a lot to report on the recipe. The only planned difference was that I added the turbinado to the fermenter as primary slowed rather than adding it to the boil kettle. I actually waited longer than planned for this addition; by the time the turbinado joined the party, the krauesen had completely dropped. The fermenter showed very little activity even with more fermentables added. I gave it a few spins several times a day for about a week and fortunately it finished out properly.

The numbers from BeerSmith have been very different from those on Brewtoad when I first brewed this recipe, most importantly in IBUs and efficiency (versus my OG-to-volume numbers). I may look into the IBU formula settings, but as long as I'm sticking to BeerSmith, I should be able to trust the consistency of my numbers. The efficiency is probably based on different values for the grains between programs; until I get serious enough to input specific numbers for each lot of grain I use, I'll probably stick to relying on BeerSmith.

First taste at bottling displayed a more subdued yeast profile than the previous batch. I pitched very warm, but may have overcooled before fermentation really got going. Next time I may just let WY3711 start in the low 70s and free rise from there; I haven't encountered any issues with it generating fusels or other problematic compounds at elevated temps so far, and hey, it is a saison yeast. We'll see how this iteration does in competition in about a month.

Rye Saison IIa - rebrew for the NV State Homebrewing Championship 2015

Batch size: 5 gallons
Projected OG: 1.053
Projected SRM: 5.5
Projected IBU: 23.6
Boil time: 60 minutes
Brewhouse efficiency: 70%

Recipe

Brewday: 16 August 2015
5 gallons at 11.2P (1.044) (w/o sugar) to fermenter.
Chilled to 78F, 1 minute of pure O2, placed in swamp cooler. Active fermentation 15 hours later at 66F (cooler temp).
Fermented in swamp cooler at 68F; ramped up to 75F after 1 day of active fermentation.

21 August 2015: Active fermentation ended. Added turbinado (in solution). No activity witnessed over 24 hours; may have happened quickly overnight? Agitated regularly for a week; showed a little activity.

Bottled: 2 September 2015
FG: 1.003
ABV: 6.6%
Bottled with 4.3 oz table sugar.

1st Place, Belgian & French Ales; 3rd Place Best of Show: NV State Homebrew Championship 2015

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Summer Pale Ale '15 tasting

This has turned out to be one of my more successful hoppy beers, though it's not as fresh as it once was. The malt character is close to what I'd like out of an American pale: background grain & bread, no more than a hint of sweetness. The hops side still needs to be dialed in; lacking experience with Chinook--and maybe getting something different from the Amarillo than I foresaw--the hop character ended up much darker and heavier than my sense memory had prepared me to expect. If the worst thing that happens, though, is that I have to do more "research" (read: brewing) to learn more, then I think I can live with that.

ALSO: Hey, it's post #100! I've gone through a couple gallons of beer over the last four and a half years since I started whinging about homebrewing. More to come!

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Appearance: Amber-gold, a bit hazy. Moderate head laces down the glass.

Smell: Assertive orange juice, hints of dark pine following up. Very nice.

Taste: Orange juice carries through from the aroma, coupled with firm upfront grapefruit/pine bitterness. Finishes somewhat rough, on the onion/pine end of the spectrum. Malt is slightly warm in the finish, but pretty low; it adds a little complexity to the end. Low for a pale ale; the hops are solidly on top.

Mouthfeel: Carbonation is a little prickly; body is low-medium with a nice creaminess. Squarely a pale ale in this area.

Overall: Not a bad pale ale, though not quite to my taste. The assertive onion/pine character was more than I’d prefer. I’d pinned it to the Chinook, though I’ve recently had it suggested to me that this character may come from certain Amarillo crops. In the end, the principal drawback from its sessionability is the hop character; I keep stopping to consider the hop character. Not a bad thing, honestly.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Competition Pale Ale

Back from summer travels and back into the mash tun. Since my rye saison and session IPA placed in this spring's Great Basin Brew Off, I needed to rebrew for the Nevada State Homebrew Championship; bottles are due at the start of October. The session IPA picked up an honorable mention in the American Ale category, entered as a pale ale. It wasn't really a proper pale (on purpose) so for competition I started from scratch with a new pale ale recipe.

I've never really nailed hoppy beers; usually I'm supremely underwhelmed by the aroma and flavor I achieve (the one exception was the session IPA, which is why it went to competition). For this batch, I leaned more toward the currently trendy tropical fruit salad style with Galaxy, blended with the no-longer-new-school big citrus of Amarillo. The malts are overwhelmingly German, with oats for body/mouthfeel (it's getting to be a regular thing) and just a little American crystal. My love affair with Vienna continues, augmented by dark Munich and Caramunich for extra maltiness. Looking for more yeast character than Cal Ale--which also seems to be the current trend for East Coast hoppy beers--I put Denny's Favorite back in the ring.

BeerSmith is back up and running, and the new version has me rethinking my efficiency calculations. I've always had my mash efficiency in mind, but looking through the new version of the program, I'm now trying to think more in terms of overall batch efficiency. Which, of course, means I'm looking at significantly lower numbers. Even factoring in that, my mash efficiency seems to have dropped off a fair bit from even a year ago. Is it my crush (same mill gap), water calculations (need more?), or just Reno? Still working it out.

Brewday went well, though it's a real struggle to get temps in check here in late August; I pitched with the wort only down to 80F. Fortunately, not much seemed to get going before the swamp cooler brought the batch into the mid 60s. The beer is through fermentation now, waiting for an empty carboy so it can receive its dry hops. The yeast will go on to ferment another pale ale, my first straight-up SMaSH.

Galaxarillo Pale Ale

Batch size: 5 gallons
Projected OG: 1.047
Projected SRM: 9.2
Projected IBU: 47.5
Boil time: 60 minutes
Brewhouse efficiency: 64%

Grains
61.5% - 6 lb Best Malz Vienna
20.5% - 2 lb Weyermann Munich II
10. 3% - 1 lb Flaked oats
5.1% - 8 oz Weyermann Caramunich II
2.6% - 4 oz C40

Hops
.2 oz Millennium (15.9%) (60 min)
1 oz Amarillo (10.7%) (10 min)
1 oz Galaxy (14.8%) (10 min)
1 oz Amarillo (dry hop - 5 days)
1 oz Galaxy (dry hop - 5 days)

Yeast
WY1450 Denny’s Favorite 50 - 1.4 l starter with continuous aeration

Extras
1 tsp Irish moss (10 min)
1 tsp Yeast nutrient (10 min)

Water (mash)
Profile: Reno
5 g Gypsum
4 g Epsom salts
3 g CaCl
3 ml Lactic acid (88%)

Brewday: 16 August 2015
Mash: 12.5 qts @ 152F for 60 minutes (+1 qt @ 212F to get to temp)
1st sparge: 10.5 qts @ 190F
2nd sparge: 12 qts @ 180F
Pre-boil volume: 7 gallons
Pre-boil SG: 10.3P (1.040)

Water profile based on the "Light colored & hoppy" profile from brewersfriend.com.
5.5 gallons at 12P (1.047) into the fermenter.
Chilled to 80F (warm ground water), 1 minute pure O2, pitched yeast.
Active fermentation 15 hours later at 65F.
Fermented in swamp cooler at 65F; brought up to 70F at the end of fermentation.

Dry hop: 5 September 2015
FG: 1.015
ABV: 4.2%
Gravity was a few points higher than expected, but the sample didn't taste overly sweet. Nice warm malt character; hops give balanced bitterness with a bit of tropical fruit flavor, but not very pronounced in taste or aroma.

2nd Place, American Ales: NV State Homebrew Championship 2015

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

American Sour Blonde

For as much as I really enjoy sour beers, it's been nearly two years since I produced one. Seeing an opportunity over this summer to set a new sour project rolling undisturbed, I put together a recipe for a moderate-gravity blonde beer based on The Rare Barrel's blonde recipe. The only alterations I made to this recipe had to do with ingredient availability: Briess aromatic malt was available locally while the Franco-Belges variety was not, and unmalted soft white wheat stood in for spelt malt. I don't foresee these changes really ruining this beer.

I really like the approach Jay Goodwin, one of The Rare Barrel's founders, has described for testing out ingredients and processes for producing sour and funky beers. He's covered it several times in his interview on the Brewing Network and in his own excellent BN show, The Sour Hour. The Rare Barrel contracts local breweries to produce three different worts--blonde, red, and dark--to their specifications, eliminating the need for their own on-premise "hot side" brewery. They then experiment with different yeast and bacteria strains and mixes, fruits and other post-boil ingredients, and other variables in their Berkeley, California facility. Over time and many batches, they seek to determine what different souring methods and processes offer sour brewers and blenders. It was a real treat to finally sample their wares in their tasting room this spring.

My plan here was to make a double batch of wort to ferment and sour with two different cultures: one with Wyeast's proprietary lambic blend, the other with the sour/funky dregs I've collected over the past year (along with the grown-up dregs from a bottle of Russian River's Damnification). I managed to produce about six and a half gallons of wort on my system, to which I then added back boiled & cooled water for eight total gallons. Two carboys received four gallons each. The batches fermented cool and controlled to start, then ramped up to the semi-uncontrolled ambient temps of Reno's summer months. The initial krauesen had dropped in both fermenters after the first few days in water baths, though the Wyeast carboy began another before we left town.

Not trusting conventional airlocks to stay full during our absence in the heat and low humidity, I set up blowoff tubes for each carboy that run into a bucket of Star San. Hopefully this will keep oxygen transfer to the wort from getting too crazy. My only big concern for this experiment comes from my top-up water; I couldn't tell before I started adding it to the carboys, but it picked up a bit of pink-brown color from the old boil kettle that held it. That kettle has had some deep scorching from a failed batch several years ago that I wasn't able to fully remove. At this point I can only hope that it won't heavily impact the way this project turns out. For now, I'm just curious to see the variation between the carboys as the different yeast and bacteria blends have expressed themselves when we return.

American Sour Blonde - double batch

Batch size: 8 gallons
Projected OG: 1.050
Projected SRM: 5
Projected IBU: 7
Boil time: 70 minutes
Brewhouse efficiency: 68%

Grains
68.75% - 11 lb 2-row
12.5% - 2 lb Wheat
6.25% - 1 lb Organic soft white wheat
6.25% - 1 lb Aromatic
6.25% - 1 lb Organic flaked oats

Hops
.2 oz Millennium (15.9%) (60 min)

Yeast
A - Bottle dregs from RR Damnation (multi-stage stirplate starter) & collected sours
B - WY3728 Belgian Lambic Blend - no starter

Extras
1 tsp Yeast nutrient (5 min)

Water (mash)
Profile: Reno
2 g Gypsum
6 g CaCl
3 g Epsom salts
1 g Salt
7 mL Lactic acid (88%)

Brewday: 15 June 2015
Mash: 156F for 60 minutes
Milled & boiled white wheat in 1 qt water for 15 minutes; added to start of main mash
Pre-boil volume: 8.25 gallons
Pre-boil SG: 12.7P (1.051)
Post-boil SG (before adding back water): 14.1P (1.057)

Top-up water had pink-brown cast to it; may be from sitting all day in the old kettle.
Final fermenter volume (total): 8 gallons
OG is estimate; possible affecting factors include untrustworthy measuring tools and stratification of wort & top-up water.

Water report and chemical calculations from brewersfriend.com, using "light colored & malty" setting.

Topped off 2 fermenters with boiled & cooled water to 4 gallons each.
30 seconds of pure O2 in each fermenter.

Ferment:
Day 1 - up to 69F ambient
Day 2 - 71F ambient
Day 3 - 72F ambient; initial krauesen dropped in both carboys
Day 4 - removed from water baths, left at ambient temps (75-85F) for several months

15 February 2016: As the WY3728 batch's airlock tended to suck back and go dry with exceeding regularity (drafty corner?) I swapped the airlocks on both batches for breathable silicone stoppers a couple months ago. Today I found out how good a job they do at creating a vacuum rather than let in outside air. I pried a bit at the top piece, expecting to let out a bit of pressure. Instead a massive gasp of air rushed in, breaking the pellicle. I haven't checked these batches' progress at all; this might be the time.

Secondary/Bottling #1: 30 April 2016
A
FG: 1.011
ABV: 4.6%
Sample was solidly lactic, tart that grabs the sides of the tongue, very light hint of saltine.

Bottled 1 gallon with .4 oz table sugar. Remainder put on fruit:
1-gal #1: 1 lb 6 oz pluots
1-gal #2: 1 lb peaches
1-gal #3: 2 lb 7.1 oz cherries

B
FG: 1.011
ABV: 4.6%
This batch took on air during fermentation and developed very obvious acetobacter infection, but tasted all right at this point. Sample was somewhat tart, generally uninteresting.

Bottled 3 gallons with 1.9 oz table sugar. Remaining gallon put on 1 lb 5 oz cranberries.

Monday, June 22, 2015

Quick Summer Saison

As with many of the current generation ---perhaps every generation--of beer enthusiasts/afficionados/nerds, a single beer brand or style rarely holds my attention for long (though a case could certainly be made for IPAs, judging from my Instagram feed). Whether it's the wide range of commercial offerings available or just my own short attention span, I like a lot of variety in my drafts and bottles. I knew one type of homebrew wouldn't tide me over for the summer, so before I'd even brewed my recent pale ale, I was already planning the followup. When my brother-in-brew Ted sent me a photo of a beautiful glass of saison he and our other brew friend Joe had recently made together, my plans solidified on that style once again.

This beer distinctly departs from my recently successful rye saison. With under two weeks to go from kettle to bottle, I aimed to produce a table-strength beer that started in the neighborhood of 1.040. Looking for a little more malt complexity, I split the base malt between Vienna and dark Munich, including moderate amounts of malted rye and oats. Not needing the gravity boost and mashing low to reach proper dryness, I skipped the sugar on this one. While I dig the ease of use and results from a good pitch of WY3711, Ted's saison reminded me that I've wanted to get back to WLP566, which worked so well in my spiced petite saison noire a few years ago (and which I'll finally rebrew this fall, hopefully).

Fermentation happened even faster than I'd planned, so much so that I didn't really get to ramp up the primary temperature very much before the krauesen dropped. Final gravity was a touch higher than I'd like but not out of bounds, and consistent with my other results with this yeast; since I moved it to bottles so quickly, I just hope it was really finished! I'm keeping an eye on the batch, and the bottles have behaved themselves so far. Happy to have a little variety in my summer supplies, especially as I travel.

Peu Été

Batch size: 4.5 gallons
Projected OG: 1.040
Projected SRM: 5.9
Projected IBU: 22.9
Boil time: 60 minutes
Brewhouse efficiency: 78%

Grains
43.5% - 3 lb Best Malz Vienna
29.0% - 2 lb Weyermann Dark Munich
14.5% - 1 lb Weyermann Rye
13.0% - .9 lb Organic flaked oats

Hops
.2 oz Millennium (15.9%) (60 min)
2 oz St. Celeia (Styrian) Goldings (4.5%) (5 min)

Yeast
WLP566 Saison II - no starter

Extras
1 tsp Yeast nutrient (5 min)
1 tsp Irish moss (5 min)

Water
Profile: Reno
1 g Gypsum
2 g (3 g) Epsom salts
5 g CaCl
2 mL Lactic Acid (88%)

Brewday: 11 June 2015
Mash: 120 minutes - dropped to 129F
Pre-boil volume: 6.5 gallons
Pre-boil SG: 8.1P (1.032)

Water report and chemical calculations from brewersfriend.com, using "light colored & malty" setting.

Began fermentation in water bath at 69-71F (beer temp) for first 2 days. Krauesen dropped on day 2; beer temp 72F. Removed from water bath to reach ambient temp (75-80F) until bottling, yeast roused regularly for the first few days.

Bottled: 19 June 2015
FG: 1.009
ABV: 4.1%
Bottled with 4.9 oz table sugar.

Early tasting: 3 July 2015
It's only had two weeks in the bottle, but so far this reads much more like a Belgian pale ale: the fruity & peppery notes are much more muted than I'd expect from a saison, accompanied by a huge, warm bready character that develops as it warms. No overcarbonation/bottle bombs so far.

Monday, June 15, 2015

Summer Pale Ale '15

Our time in Nevada over the past ten months has been exciting, hair rasing, and pretty much an all-out marathon through the end of the school year. Consequently, the last few months have included no time for brewing, borne out in the blog's lack of activity. Placing in a local competition with a couple winter beers a while back was nice, but in the meantime I've actually run out of homebrew on hand; that's not a regular occurrence here! Regular duties wrapped up a few weeks ago, though, finally leaving some time to get the system cranking again ahead of leaving for the summer.

So what's first up, coming back after a dry spell and looking to summer quaffing? Yup, American pale ale. This beer should fulfill several of my needs: moderate alcohol, quick turnaround, hoppy, easy drinking in the heat. Somehow, I think I've managed to entirely avoid using Chinook hops--at least in any meaningful, memorable way--in my seven years homebrewing. That ends here: I'm looking forward to tasting this "rough, piney" hop as it plays with Amarillo.

After talking with a new homebrewing friend here in Reno, I'm also messing with a very short dry hop exposure time here. I added the dry hops to the primary last night and the beer will go into bottles after just a day (and maybe a half) of exposure. (Never mind, it took all week to get to it, so dry hopping lasted about my normal five days.) My previous thought had been that the pellets might not even fully hydrate in that amount of time, but we'll see how it comes out. This is also the first batch on which I used my new pure oxygen setup; just a minute of pure O2 was much more convenient than 45 minutes with filtered air, and yielded a nice strong start. I'll be happy to have my own beer on hand again soon.

Summer Pale Ale ’15

Batch size: 5.5 gallons
Projected OG: 1.048
Projected SRM: 8
Projected IBU: 39
Boil time: 60 minutes
Brewhouse efficiency: 75%

Grains
82.1% - 8 lb Vienna
10.3% - 1 lb Flaked oats
5.1% - .5 lb Caravienne
2.5% - .25 lb C60

Hops

.7 oz Chinook (11.4%) (60 min)
1 oz Amarillo (10.7%) (10 min)
2 oz Amarillo (0 min - 150 min steep)
.4 oz Chinook (0 min - 150 min steep)
2 oz Amarillo (Dry hop - 1 5 days)
1 oz Chinook (Dry hop - 1 5 days)

Yeast
1 pkg US-05 (rehydrated)

Extras
1 tsp Yeast nutrient (0 min)
1 tsp Irish moss (0 min)

Water
Profile: Reno
6 g (7 g) Gypsum
3 g CaCl
3 g (4 g) Epsom Salts
2 mL Lactic Acid (88%)

Brewday: 3 June 2015

Mash: 154F for 60 minutes
Pre-boil volume: 7 gallonsPre-boil SG: 9.2P (1.037)

Water report and chemical calculations from brewersfriend.com, using "light colored & hoppy" setting.

Pure O2 for 60 seconds.
Began fermenting in water bath (68F) by the next morning; cooled bath to 64F. Let water bath free rise to 70F on 6th day after active fermentation began. Removed from water bath—free rise to ~75F—on 9th day after active fermentation began.

Dry hop: 14 June 2015

Bottled: 19 June 2015
FG: 1.012
ABV: 4.7%
Bottled with 4.2 oz table sugar.

Early tasting: 3 July 2015
Still young in the bottle, but so far this beer seems solidly made, with no standout off-flavors. Great Amarillo aroma; however, I don't think I'm really into Chinook. In its best moments, it adds an assertive piney note to the flavor, which can be very interesting; at its worst it gives the beer a rough, muddled, and (dare I say it) somewhat "catty" character. Hoping further age will better meld the hops.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Rye Saison II tasting

Finally managed to do this long-promised tasting. Of course, I ran out of the first batch before this point, so we're down to a single non-comparative review. To make up for that, though, I'm including highlights from the comments I received on this batch from the 2015 Great Basin Brew Off here in Reno, in which this beer took first place in the Belgian & French Ales category. I also just learned/realized today that this beer--along with the first session IPA--is now eligible for the Nevada State Homebrewing Championship in the fall, so it'll soon be rebrew time for me. I may diversify the grain bill to a degree, but I'm not unhappy with what this beer has become with some age.

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Date: 10 May 2015

Venue: Home (Sparks, NV)

Appearance - Hazy golden orange. Medium bubbles collect at the top of the glass, creating a dense, lasting foam stand that leaves a bit of lace.

Smell - Perfume, a little soap, and pear. Maybe a bit of orange. Some spice in the background. Very low hop aroma.

Taste - Dry & spicy; clove, flowery, light fruit (pear again?). Finishes with a solid phenolic kick that definitely says saison. The yeast really shines here. Hint of malt in the back. Nice & clean.

Mouthfeel - Lively, prickly carbonation, but the body is still medium full; thanks, rye malt!

Overall - My early reservations disappeared with age. Spice & phenolics are right on. Maybe I'd go for more malt and/or fruity ester character, but I'm very happy with this simple recipe and looking forward to more saison brewing.

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Judges' comments:

Aroma - "Some very nice spiciness up front. A bit of black pepper, honey, tropical fruit."
   "Fruity aroma with some grainy maltiness, peppery aroma also. Very high carbonation makes it tingle in the nose."

Appearance - "Golden color, white rocky head that persists..."
   "Great color and appearance. Head is a little thinner that I'd like to see, but is persistent."

Flavor - "A bit of sweet graininess in the front, followed with a lot of acid from carbonation. Pineapple. Some nice hop bitterness that lingers. Some spice pops through."
   "Spicy flavor with some low hop bittering and flavor, no tartness in flavor. Dry finish by the hop bittering lingers..."

Mouthfeel - "Medium body, high carbonation, no astringency, no tartness, no alcohol warming."
   "Carbonation is high, almost too high."

Overall - "Very tasty. High carbonation makes it appear very dry and with the lingering hops it seems a bit too bitter for the style..."
   "...Clean with peppery phenols but balanced. Seems a little higher hop rates but still very drinkable..."