Archive for February, 2008

Progress and tastings

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

Of four batches on the go, two in production and two in consumption:

Aussie sparkling ale

Cold-conditioning in the fridge, waiting for the haze to drop before I bottle. Estery with banana and pear, crossing over into detectable alcohol notes. Not ideal but I’m hoping mild enough to be acceptable with a little bottle age.

Brow Nail

Like the sparkling, also copped a warmer fermentation temp. The Nottingham has thrown up a lot of sulphur compounds, right now it’s around ten days in primary and has progressed from H2Sy to meaty. I’ll rack it this weekend.. if i get around to it.

Quiet Ale #1: Hazed and Confused

Cloudy and slightly undercarbonated. Hop aroma mild with a slight grassy/vegetative edge. Quaffable but not stellar, with the cloudiness and lack of head (yet fizzy enough on the palate) is not one to share. Underlying balance is almost right though, so will brew the same recipe again with better fermentation management.

Lackwit

The one that was low on gravity and high on fermentation temp (higher so than the brown and aussie ales). However, so far it’s supporting the notion that belgian yeasts handle higher temperatures well. This one cleared nicely and the carbonation is good, but the head is poor like the quiet ale. The aroma is not the typical coriander and curacao, but it’s definitely yeast driven (I currently have trouble with phenolic descriptors). The styrian and simcoe late additions (more importantly, the simcoe) are not dominating; if I didn’t tell me that I put big american hops in here then I would never have noticed. Verdict is very pleasing and worth a repeat, next time with better efficiency.

Anyway, I think today’s lesson is to keep a better handle on the fermentation temperatures for the non-belgian ales. I’m probably going to drop a saison and quiet ale #2 next, so at least I’ll only have to work on managing the latter.

English brown ale brewed

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

OG 1.046
22 IBU
42 EBC

92% JW trad ale
5% TF medium crystal
3% TF choc

Goldings bittering
0.5g/L Goldings @ flameout

Nottingham

…the intended recipe. Looks like efficiency has taken a little jump to around 80%, so I may add a couple litres of water to the fermenter. Clearest wort into the kettle that I’ve ever had, normally I get a little haze but today the runnings were crystal clear.

Beer also nearly turned into an american brown till I reminded myself that I actually wanted something nice and malty for a change.

Sparkling ale is sitting at 1.016 and still trickling away. Contemplating what to brew next, saison is at the top of the list.

Aussie Ale Brewed

Friday, February 1st, 2008

OG 1.060
25 IBU

50% JW trad ale
40% Galaxy
10% wheat malt

Goldings bittering
0.5g/L Southern Cross @ flameout

Coopers ale yeast

Fermenting slightly warm (low-mid 20′s). Ironing out the kinks in my new brewers, just bought a bigger pot for collecting first runnings, need to shorten some hoses and buy some hose clamps as well as a shifter and some multigrips. Efficiency was satifactory, around 70%. Whee!