Been doing some reading and it looks like my next beer will be an English mild. It's not typically sold in the US, so I haven't ever tried it before. Sure looks interesting though. Dark, not very bitter and a relatively low ABV probably about 3%.
Beer Reviews, Home brewing and experimentation in beer. Lagers, ales, stouts, and porters are all welcome.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Time to find examples of beer styles.
In preparation for my parents visit in April, I'm going to assemble some of my favorite beers for them to try. It's easy for me to find some that are very malty, because that's what I like. I'm going to try and find a good example of several different styles and then have a tasting for my parents. Just to help me dial in basic examples for people.
Styles I need to find examples of
American Lager or Light Lager - Budweiser ?
German Pilsner - Warsteiner
English Pale Ale or ESB - Bass or Boddingtons
Irish or Scottish Ale - Sun Kings Wee Mac
IPA / APA - Dogfishhead 60 min
Brown Ale - Newcastle
Porter - Sierra Nevada
Sweet Stout - Widmer Snow Plow
Dry Stout - Guiness
Belgian Wit Beer - Hoegaarden
Weigh in with your style / brand preferences
There are several styles I'm missing, but they aren't nearly as common. I'm looking for a good tasting, easy to find example of each
Styles I need to find examples of
American Lager or Light Lager - Budweiser ?
German Pilsner - Warsteiner
English Pale Ale or ESB - Bass or Boddingtons
Irish or Scottish Ale - Sun Kings Wee Mac
IPA / APA - Dogfishhead 60 min
Brown Ale - Newcastle
Porter - Sierra Nevada
Sweet Stout - Widmer Snow Plow
Dry Stout - Guiness
Belgian Wit Beer - Hoegaarden
Weigh in with your style / brand preferences
There are several styles I'm missing, but they aren't nearly as common. I'm looking for a good tasting, easy to find example of each
Poor Yield on Small Batch
Well, I bottled up Dad's stout. It's very sweet, but it does taste like beer going into the bottle, so that's good. Horrible horrible yield. If I am going to continue to do small batches I'm going to have to start with a smaller fermenter.
I used the 5 gallon fermenter for this batch and it's so wide that even leaving just 1/4" of beer in the bottom probably cost me a bottle of beer. I had a lot of trub from all the oatmeal and grain, and I'm sure that sucked up some liquid as well.
15 bottles though and my first experience with a bottle capper. My boss loaned me her's and it seemed to work pretty well. That will give us 3 bottles to experiment with when Dad visits and if he likes it a 12 pack to take home to Oregon. He thinks that will last him a year. Personally, I think he could drink beer a little more often than that.
I used the 5 gallon fermenter for this batch and it's so wide that even leaving just 1/4" of beer in the bottom probably cost me a bottle of beer. I had a lot of trub from all the oatmeal and grain, and I'm sure that sucked up some liquid as well.
15 bottles though and my first experience with a bottle capper. My boss loaned me her's and it seemed to work pretty well. That will give us 3 bottles to experiment with when Dad visits and if he likes it a 12 pack to take home to Oregon. He thinks that will last him a year. Personally, I think he could drink beer a little more often than that.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Dad's Stout
Well, it had been 2 weeks, so I thought it should be time to bottle up dad's stout. I got everything sanitized and the bottles ready to fill. I brewed a new batch of breakfast stout for myself and got everything ready to put on the lees of the milk stout.
Disaster, the milk stout wasn't finished fermenting. I checked the gravity and it still needs to drop at least another 10 points. Here I am, everything ready to go and no place to put all the new beer.
Luckily I had another carboy (fermenter) that I was able to get cleaned and sanitized. I got the milk stout transferred and a new airlock put on it. I let the new beer slow cool and then here on Wednesday I'm going to check the gravity again and see if I got those final 10 points.
The new beer I brewed for myself came in @ 1.070 which is pretty heavy. Lots of oatmeal. It did however start fermenting quite quickly when I threw it on the old yeast cake from dad's stout.
Disaster, the milk stout wasn't finished fermenting. I checked the gravity and it still needs to drop at least another 10 points. Here I am, everything ready to go and no place to put all the new beer.
Luckily I had another carboy (fermenter) that I was able to get cleaned and sanitized. I got the milk stout transferred and a new airlock put on it. I let the new beer slow cool and then here on Wednesday I'm going to check the gravity again and see if I got those final 10 points.
The new beer I brewed for myself came in @ 1.070 which is pretty heavy. Lots of oatmeal. It did however start fermenting quite quickly when I threw it on the old yeast cake from dad's stout.
Monday, March 5, 2012
Gluten Free? New Planet Pale Ale
Since both Mom and Uncle John are gluten free for medical reasons, it's time to explore some gluten free or GF beers. Uncle John's favorite is Bard's Gold. I haven't found it locally, but he says it's "drinkable". Not good, but drinkable.
Since I haven't found it, I thought I'd look around and see what I could find. At my local store, I did find New Planet Off Grid Pale Ale. I brought it home cold on a Saturday afternoon and decided no point in waiting around. Poured it right into my glass and gave it a shot.
My notes - Consistent with Pale Ale style. Clean,crisp and hoppy. Good nose, poor head and slightly grapefruity. Color is too dark for a "pale ale" but the taste is fine. I'd be hard pressed to pick it out from a regular pale ale.
Overall I thought it was pretty good. Price was a little high @ nearly $2.50 a bottle. I'm not into the pale ale style in general, but I thought it was a pretty good example. I'd give it a 3 out of 5, pretty middle of the road. However, if one is limited to GF beer, it's probably pretty good because it tastes like regular beer.
Since I haven't found it, I thought I'd look around and see what I could find. At my local store, I did find New Planet Off Grid Pale Ale. I brought it home cold on a Saturday afternoon and decided no point in waiting around. Poured it right into my glass and gave it a shot.
My notes - Consistent with Pale Ale style. Clean,crisp and hoppy. Good nose, poor head and slightly grapefruity. Color is too dark for a "pale ale" but the taste is fine. I'd be hard pressed to pick it out from a regular pale ale.
Overall I thought it was pretty good. Price was a little high @ nearly $2.50 a bottle. I'm not into the pale ale style in general, but I thought it was a pretty good example. I'd give it a 3 out of 5, pretty middle of the road. However, if one is limited to GF beer, it's probably pretty good because it tastes like regular beer.
Brewday - Feb 25th
Plowed Snow – half batch Feb 25 2012
Brew Notes – 2.5 gallon batch for Papa – Widmer Snow Plow
clone. Found recipe via homebrewtalk.com
and web search.
Batch size 2.5 Gal
Boil – 40 mins (treat as 1 hour because no ice bath cooling)
Sweet Milk Stout
Techniques new to this batch, small scale and weighing my
own ingredients. Also substituting hops
and using brewtarget free software.
Grains – 2.5lb Light DME, .75lb crystal 60L, .5lb wheat DME,
.5lbs cara-pils, .5lb flaked barley, .5lb lactose, .375lb flaked oats, .375lb
black roast barley, .1875lb black patent
malt
Hops - .3 oz Chinook – 12.2% aa bittering (40 mins), .25 oz
EKG – 4.9% aa aroma (15 mins)
Yeast – washed Scottish ale from the 80\= a month ago –
Starter – 2 cups water – 1 cup DME
Misc notes: About 40
outside and windy. It took a lot of time
to get everything to a boil. Used the
scale for the first time and it certainly adds a lot of planning time to
measure everything. I should have taken
an OG and a final volume reading. I
probably should have topped it up. Also
the first time making a starter. I
should have used twice as much DME, but fermentation seemed to have taken off
fine in the back. Also I cooled it in
the brew kettle out on the porch since it was cold out. This gave me time to get the starter ready.
Certainly easier just to seal it up in foil and wait. It’s harder because it takes more time. I used a strainer when it was going into the
fermenter this time. Boy that clogged up
fast. I’d better set up a 2 strainer
system for next time.
Triton Brewing
Visit them here :
What a fun place.
Staff was wonderful and a rotating selection of food trucks out front
means you shouldn’t ever be bored. Even
dogs are welcome.
Triton is a fun little brewery that’s been open for less
than a year. Decent beer selection and
locally owned. It was a fun evening
there after the Monarch beverage tour.
Our tour leader Bob Mack was able to arrange things for us and Triton
was kind enough to buy the first round of beer so we could try their products.
The staff at Triton was very accommodating. They gave us a tour of their brew area and
moved tables around so that our group of nearly 20 could all sit together. I ordered the Four Barrel Brown so I could
review it. I also had a sampler just so
I could enjoy all their various styles. (I liked the IPA the best)
Triton Brewing Four
Barrel Brown
According to the menu- Four Barrel Brown - “A fun and
nuanced brown, our Four Barrel offers a very earthy, malty nose with light hop
overtones. You’ll taste nuttiness, caramel and even coffee that we’ve finished
with some light hops for a very nice balance”
- 5.2% ABV, 25 IBU, 21 SRM
My tasting notes – Lots of aroma hops, nice fruity nose.
Good clarity – medium brown. Some lacing and head retention even after 30 minutes.
Malty but not sweet.
That was the end of my notes, we were there with a group and
I had a great time meeting people and talking with the other co-op parents. Yes this was a preschool function minus the
preschoolers. For more information about the co-op visit them here http://www.necoop.org/
Tour of Monarch Beverage – Hosted by Bob Mack of World Class Beer
Monarch beverage is an Indiana owned family business. They
moved to a new facility on the east side of Indianapolis about 3 years
ago. Monarch sells over 17 million cases
of beer and wine annually. As a
wholesaler and distributor, they handle beer and wine only – No liquor.
Since the 21st amendment – states all regulate
alcohol independently. In Indiana there is a three tier system. Breweries sell to distributors who then sell
to the retail stores. The distributor
takes care of all transportation, most shelf stocking and paying the alcohol
taxes on everything that is sold. Monarch represents approximately ¼ of all the
beer tax revenue in the state of Indiana.
In 1970 there were roughly 40 breweries operating
nationwide. Today that number is close to 2000. There are almost different
breweries that have products available in Indiana. Everything that is not a Budweiser product is
handled through Monarch beverage. Even
with the large number of breweries that are now available beer consumption is
actually down slightly over the last 5 years.
That said, on the day of our tour Monarch had 1.4 million cases of beer
in stock.
Monarch has several innovative systems to help them manage their 900 – 1000 daily stops. The entire system is computer controlled, and many items go from the loading dock to the shipping dock without ever being touched by a human hand. They have 2 beer robots that tear down full pallets and load them into the automated system. They also have 4 robots that palletize orders. These robots are part of the vertique system. Everything is loaded so it comes of the truck in the correct order based on when each stop is scheduled throughout the day.
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