Labels

1610 (4) ale (1) all grain (3) alpha (1) alpha acid (1) amber ale (3) amylase (1) aroma (1) beer (11) Belgian (1) Beta (1) Birthday (1) bittering (1) boil (1) book (1) bottle (2) bottle opener (1) bottling (2) bread (2) brew (7) brew day (8) Brewery (6) brewing (6) Brewing Terms (1) brewmasters (2) brown ale (7) candy (1) cap (2) cascade hops (6) Catholic (1) cider (1) citra (1) Colds (1) Craft beer (3) CRKT Ashworth Turtle Knife (1) Dextrin (1) Dextrinization (1) DME (1) Dogfish (1) Draft Line Brewery (1) dry hop (1) ESB (1) fall (3) FG (2) finding (1) flavor (1) Glucose (1) graff (1) grain (2) Harvest (2) History (2) home (2) Home brew (1) homestead brew supply (3) honey (1) hops (9) ipa (5) kent goldings (3) Liquefication (1) LME (3) malt (4) maple (1) mash (3) melanoidan (1) mount hood (4) nano (1) Natty Greeenes (1) NC (4) NC brewday (1) NC brewery (1) northern brewer (3) oak (2) OG (2) old school (1) old times (1) Pine needle tea (1) pop top (1) porter (7) Pumpkin (1) quercus (1) Recipes (6) Saccharification (1) sassafras (1) secondary (3) shelf (1) starch (1) stout (5) terms (1) tree (1) trees (1) trub (1) Turtle Mama (1) US-05 (1) vanilla (2) Vitamin C (1) wash (1) white rabbit (1) wood (2) yeast (5)

Search This Blog

Saturday, November 30, 2013

The brewer, The baker and the conversation maker

The brewer, The baker and the conversation maker


A few weeks ago I wanted to bake some bread.  I had just finished brewing my Beoir dorcha le blas vanilla porter, so I had a lot of spent grain leftover. So I thought, I have heard of people using spent grain in bread and I wanted to do it too.  I wanted to use this malt from the time I was mashing in with it because of its smell, Black Paten and Chocolate malt being so dark and roasty.  Just great for bread.  



WOW. The bread was really good 


Spent Malt Grain Bread Recipe 

1 cup warm water                  
4 Tbsp sugar                        
2 cups spent grains              
1 Tbsp salt                          
2 Tbsp oil (I used coconut oil)
3 - 3.5 cups bread flour           
1 pack of bread yeast             
       
  1. Combine warm water with sugar and yeast and let sit till the yeast is dehydrated.
  2. Add salt, oil, grains and 1 cup flour and mix well. 
  3. Slowly mix in the rest of the flour.
  4. Mix till you have a dough ball.
  5. Flour your counter top and knead dough well.
  6. Cover dough.
  7. Let dough rise for 1 hour or until doubled in size.
  8. Punch dough down and shape in to loaf.
  9. Cover dough and let rise for 1 hour or until doubled.
  10. Bake at 425 degrees F for 20 min then reduce heat to 375 degrees F for 10
  11. Eat you AWESOME bread.




Brew today, See you tomorrow.

      







Wednesday, November 27, 2013

beoir dorcha le blas

Today I transferred my Vanilla Porter to secondary. This is the beer I blogged about in The unnamed one stout porter and now it has been named beoir dorcha le blas. 

Beoir dorcha le blas
Vanilla Porter
O.G. 1.058
F.G. 1.022 (could still drop a little)
ABV 4.7










Want some cake?

Wyeast 1084 yeast cake.



Brew today, See you tomorrow.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

The Unnamed One. Stout Porter.

Take a step back in time with me. Imagine we are in Ireland in the late 1700's and we want a dark strong beer. All the street and river porters are drinking these amazing looking beers. We ask one man what he is drinking and he says " Oh this is a Porter".

 So today I will brew a Stout Porter.  I used European grains  with the addition of Flaked Oats.  I did "Mericaize" it.  I use American Hops, Mount Hood pellet and Centennial whole leaf. 




























































Brew today, See you tomorrow.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Quick History of Stouts and Porters

Come sit down and let me tell you a story

Originally back in my day a man who walked tall and protected his family, we called a stout man. Now back then the word Stout meant brave or proud.  Around the start of the 14th century the word stout transitioned to mean strong, but was not used in referring to beer till 1677. Written in Egertons 1677 manuscript he wrote about a strong beer, calling it a stout beer.  The expression stout porter was first applied in the 18th century, just meaning a strong porter. Later in 1820 Guinness used the term stout porter.

Now going back to the 1720's in London there was this brown beer that was real popular with the street and river Porters. Being so popular with the Porters, the beer got the name porter.  This beer had a strong flavor and took longer to spoil.  The beer would increase in alcohol as it aged and was one of the first beers that was aged at the brewery and shipped to pubs ready to drink.   In 1776 porters began to be brewed in Ireland. These porters were stronger in flavor. Shortly after  that in 1780 Guinness started brewing porters. .



Sit back down, this story is almost over.


  We are going to go back to modern times. In my young adult adventures in the 19th century I saw stouts and porters go from being brown beer to dark brown to black beer. This change in color was due to the introduction of Black Patent malt to the beer.

Moving to modern day. Are you still with me?....... Okay good. Now in the 21st century you can step in to your local tap house and order a porter and get a dark strong tasting beer, not always strong on alcohol but strong on flavor.  Or you can order a stout and get a even stronger tasting beer that will run most of the time stronger on alcohol than a porter.



Brew today, See you tomorrow


        

Monday, November 11, 2013

Down the Rabbit-Hole We Go

                 Oh my ears and whiskers! The White Rabbit.




Today I visited a brewery right in my home town, White Rabbit Brewery



White Rabbit Brewing Company
219 Fish Drive
Angier, NC 27501


(919) 527-2739 (BREW)


They invited me over to help them brew and they would pay me too! Pay me in Beer! That's like taking a kid to a candy store and letting them try all the candy.




'Who are you?' said the Caterpillar.


White Rabbit Brewing Company is a brewery that bases all their beers on the book "Alice's Adventures In Wonderland." . All their beers names come from the book, like: Tea Party Porter, Dunkin Dormouse Octoberfest, Cheshires Pumpkin Ale, Jabberwocky Tripel, and Drink Me Cream Ale just to name a few.
 



“Begin at the beginning," the King said, very gravely, "and go on till you come to the end: then stop.”  Lewis Carroll

I had a chance to talk with Owner and Brewmaster Kenneth Ostraco while I drank one of their Tea Party Porters, Which was amazing.  It being a Vanilla Bourbon Porter, It was strong on vanilla and bourbon flavor in the best way possible. But to focus on the quote above, Kenneth told me the brewery's story from the beginning to where he is looking to go with it in the future. He started off like most all other Masterbrewers, As a home brewer. White Rabbit has a nice size space with a tap house in the front and the brew house in the back.  The tap house has eight beers on tap at any given time and the brew houses air is full of malt and hops about twice a week.  Kenneth went on to tell me he is right where he wants to be. He has a good clientele and a list of clients waiting for beer. From our conversation, it appears that Kenneth didn't want his brewery to be like fire works, shoot to the top and fizzle out. " I want to take small steps and stick to my grassroots" said Kenneth.  He had told me he has had some big offers to help him go full size and become a full size brewery.  He went on to say "I do not want to jump into the deep end and have someone hand me two cinder blocks and see how long I can tread water".


   

 





I'm late / I'm late / For a very important date. / No time to say "Hello, Goodbye". / I'm late, I'm late, I'm late. The White Rabbit


Time to start Brewing.  We brewed three barrels of beer. Gryphon’s California Common, Rabbit's Nutbrown Ale and Pale in the Park.  Good times hanging out with Kenneth from White Rabbit and Adam from Homesteaders Brew Supply.


































Brew today, See you tomorrow

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Better Late than Never

Friday was Bottling day

The second best part of brewing, Bottling day. The first being the day you crack one open and drink it. I bottled up all of my 1610 Brown Ale. I primed the beer for bottling with honey. Now the honey should not play any part in the final flavor of the beer, Due to the yeast eating it all up. Yeast loves honey. I use a ratio of 3 TBSP of honey per gallon of brew. Hopefully it turns out good. One of my brewing friends told me it will turn out carbonated like Pepsi. But that's what I am here to find out.  Put weird stuff in your beer and see what happens.    



Here is one of the best things you can invest in for bottling. Its a spring loaded bottle filler. When you push the filler down to the bottom of the bottle and push down the spring is compressed and allows  the beer to flow and when you lift it up it stops the flow. When you pull the filler out of the bottle it leaves just the right amount of head space for the carbonation.  
Bottles all filled and done, Ready to sit for two weeks, If I can wait that long.


I even Filled up one of my Aviator Brewery growler. Can't wait to drink it and share with my friends and family. Because that's what brewing is all about.                                                                                        





































Brew today, See you Tomorrow

Friday, November 8, 2013

Give me one of those Hop Candies!

I went in to my local brew supply shop Homesteaders Brew Supply to get a few things (Star san and a bottle filler).  If you did not know today was my Bottling day. I know f***ing awesome. My 1610 Brown Ale is now bottled and conditioning, But I will do a follow up blog on that later.


Anyway, To todays topic. I was in the brew shop talking to the owner about recipes when candy caught my eye.  It was Hop candy, Made with real hop oils. The company that makes them is B Hoppy Candys. They have a few hop flavors , Like Cascade, Nugget, and East Kent Goldings.  As I was looking at them I asked him if they are any good. He reached under the counter and pulled out 4 or 5 sandwich bags with smaller sample pieces and said try them. So I did and WOW  I don't know which one I tried first but it was very hoppy but good.  If you like IPAs then you will like this candy.


B Hoppy Candies



























They come in bigger pieces than what is in the picture. This is some sample pieces that I took home and I broke in to smaller chunks so my wife and kids could try. Lets just say they were not the biggest fans.  My three year old said in his words " its Buscusting". Ha ha I think they are an acquired taste that I have acquired.




In the picture Below is the packaging they come in.
Photo from Northern Brewer
http://www.northernbrewer.com/shop/cascade-hop-candy-4-oz.html


Brew today, See you tomorrow

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Brewers Yeast Bread

Last night I got a little crazy. I baked bread. Not just any old bread.  It was Brewers Yeast Bread.  I had some US- 05 yeast I had harvest from my Brown Ale that I needed to use, But I did not want to use it in another brew.  US- 05 coming from a dry yeast pack, So if I want to use it in another beer I will just buy another pack of it. That being said I still did not want this yeast to go to waste. So what was I to do but make bread.








Look how much it rose. Brewers yeast being slow growing, I had to add a little Bakers yeast. It came out to be around 1/3 bakers yeast and 2/3 Brewers yeast.

Tasting Notes

It smelled like yeasty bread.
It had a slight taste of beer, I think it came from the brewers yeast.
It was very good.






In the first  minute nothing but crumbs were left.


Recipe
Brewers yeast Bread


1 Cup warm water
1/3 cup sugar
1 Tbsp Bakes yeast
2 Tbsp liquid brewers yeast
3/4 Tsp salt
1/8 oil ( I used butter)
3 cups of flour






  1. Mix water, sugar and and yeast in large bowl.  Allow the yeast to proof till it resembles a creamy foam.
  2. Mix salt and oil in to yeast. Mix in flour one cup at a time.
  3.  Knead dough in a lightly floured surface until smooth. 
  4. Place dough in a well oiled bowl and cover with a warm damp cloth.  Allow dough to rise until doubled in bulk, Around 1 hour.
  5. Place dough in a small oiled loaf pan 
  6. Bake at 350 for 25-30 minutes




Brew today, See you tomorrow






Sunday, November 3, 2013

Yeast Harvesting Time.

How to harvest your yeast and wash it.

After you have either  racked all your beer in to secondary or bottles you can harvest your yeast.  

Okay, you say you just did that. Well look at the bottom of your carboy or bucket. You see all the leftover stuff down there. That is your trub and dormant yeast. You want the yeast, Not the trub. So we have to wash it.

How do you wash yeast?

Here are the steps to follow to harvest and wash your Yeast.

  1. Get a pot of water boiling and put some Mason jars in it.
  2. After a good boil (10 to 15 minutes) allow the water to cool.
  3. Take the cooled water and pour 2 mason jars worth of water in to the fermenter with the yeast trub cake.
  4. Take your fermenter and swirl it around until well mixed.
  5. Let the liquid settle for 20 minutes.
  6. Drain liquid in to clean boiled jars.
  7. Let the jars settle ( put in to the refrigerator to speed up settling.)
  8. Pour in just the top two layers in to a new jar. Leave the thick grayish brown stuff in old jar.(It's just trub.)
  9. In new jar with what you just poured add around one cup of the boiled water (cooled) and swirl to mix.
  10. Let the jar settle again and you will have good yeast to use.

Here is what I got from my last brew.
   What you see is. The top is the wash water, then there is a nice layer of white yeast and the rest is a mix of yeast and trub.


Good luck to you in your harvesting.

Brew today, See you tomorrow.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Recipe 1610 Brown Ale



1610 Brown Ale

5 Gallons 

Partial Mash
Target OG 1.065
Target FG 1.018
ABV 6.13%
IBU 38- 39



Malt

6 lbs Amber DME
4 oz UK Chocolate
4 oz UK Crystal 60L
2 oz UK Black Patent 
2 oz Belgian Biscuit
   

Hops

1 oz East Kent Golding @ 60 minutes
1 oz Mount Hood        @ 45 minutes
1 oz Styrian Goldings    @ 15 minutes

Yeast

Safale American Ale Yeast  US 05



Brew today, See you Tomorrow


In to Secondary we Go.

Today we transferred the 1610 Brown Ale in to secondary. I also took a gravity reading and it was 1.018. Not bad, my FG I was looking for was 1.016 so we will hit that in secondary, I'm sure.  Also we did a tasting, You will not believe  what it tasted like. Go ahead and guess... Beer, well flat beer. It had a nice biscuity, roasted malt flavor with a little bitterness for the hops.  But hey the yeast did its job.  It did such a good job I am going to harvest some of it. But that will be for a later post.

Next

Now we wait again maybe a week or so, If I can wait that long before we bottle them up. I can't wait for them to carbonate.  They are going to be so good.

 That's it for now.

Brew today,  See you tomorrow.