I would love a garage sink like that!
Chipotlemonger said:
I would love a garage sink like that!
Ornlu said:
I thought you quit drinking?
Yea I probably am in this phase of homebrewing. Though I feel like I'm close on a good hazy after my first attempt, and my wife likes that style a lot.AlaskanAg99 said:
I have decided I will only brew beers with a long keg life. Nothing hoppy.
Eh, I wouldn't really call them good. Drinkable, sure.Chipotlemonger said:Yea I probably am in this phase of homebrewing. Though I feel like I'm close on a good hazy after my first attempt, and my wife likes that style a lot.AlaskanAg99 said:
I have decided I will only brew beers with a long keg life. Nothing hoppy.
Next batch I make I will probably shoot for 3 gallons max I think. 2.5 would probably be fine too.
I have made a couple of good ambers over the years, but messed up my most recent attempt a year or 2 ago. That is the style I would love to perfect I think.
hurricanejake02 said:
How the hell did I just now find this thread?!?
I've been brewing for about 4 years now... and apparently it's been that long since I ventured over to F&S.
Just kegged my Watermelon/Tajin Gose, and brewed a Pre-Prohibition Porter on Monday night. Need to find time next week to knock out a Brown IPA.
hurricanejake02 said:
It is a crowd favorite, and an excellent boat beer. Just polished off this year's batch last weekend, have a Marzen in the fermenter now.
hurricanejake02 said:
Yeah, I specifically try to buy the one with no added sugar.
Honestly, Goodbelly has saved me when some other lacto cultures have failed to take off. You don't pick up the flavor, but I do try to stick to flavors that wouldn't distract from the beer I'm making if you did.
fav13andac1)c said:hurricanejake02 said:
It is a crowd favorite, and an excellent boat beer. Just polished off this year's batch last weekend, have a Marzen in the fermenter now.
I'm sure I don't speak for just me in wanting to hear the recipe. Pretty cool idea. I could see it being a hit in Corpus where I live.
Just pitched the yeast this morning and did a little gjrkauk for good luck. Ground water temp is about 85 degrees right now so I let my FC do the rest of the work after finishing at about 11 PM last night. Brew day went okay. I spilled some grain when I fired up the drill on the grain mill. It spun the teeth too fast which rotated the whole machine. Lost some efficiency but it'll be fine.
Ornlu, what temp do you ferment this yeast? I know it's pretty foolproof, but just curious on your method.
hurricanejake02 said:
Just wrapped up a triple stack of German Lagers - Marzen, Munich Dunkel, and Doppelbock, all on the same WLP820 yeast cake, just pitched one after the other.
So naturally, todays brewday, in an effort to change things up is a... Weizenbock. Shooting for 8%.
hurricanejake02 said:
I'm fermenting... somewhat traditionally... I keep it at 54F until I'm halfway to my target FG, then let the temp naturally rise to 65 to clear up any diacetyl and ferment out those last gravity points. I am fermenting under pressure as well, although usually only about 5 psi. I then cold crash, gelatin fine, carbonate (while cold crashing) and move it over to a keg to hang out for a few weeks before I start tasting it.
I'm certainly not the 6 month lager purist by any means, nor do I care to be.
As far as keeping the yeast sanitary, because I pressure transfer the wort out of the fermenter, I never open it up until I'm ready to pitch the next batch of wort onto the cake. I have two Fermzilla All-Rounders, so I'll have another clean and sanitized lid/floating dip tube ready to go, pitch the new batch, seal it back up and let it go.
Galaxy is a fun hop to play with - although a bit expensive to use as a bittering hop, in my opinion. As long as your other stuff has been kept in the freezer, it's probably still usable. Just give it a good smell test. You could run a small batch and see if you're getting enough IBUs off of it - if not, throw in a little extra to make up for the age.
My efficiency was higher than I anticipated it being. Hit 1.060 rather than the 1.054. Granted, when I wrote the recipe I dialed down my efficiency because it had been a while for me since brewing and my efficiency is normally crap. Wrote the recipe with a 50% brewhouse efficiency, I hit 55% it looks like.Chipotlemonger said:
Just ordered 8 lb of Pilsner malt (Viking) and some 34/70 for a "Czech" Amber Lager. Every other ingredient is something I already have on hand. Just using odds and ends, first batch in a while and don't care to stick too close to the norm of the guidelines, hence the quotation marks. I used it the BJCP style notes as a guide when I put the recipe together.
3.5 gallons into the fermenter. I am assuming low efficiency since it's been so long and I'm rusty. I also don't mill myself, so the milling is never as tight as I would like it.
8 lb Viking Pils
1 lb 2-Row
0.5 lb Munich
0.4 lb Crystal 40L
0.4 lb Crystal 120L
SafLager w-34/70
60 minute boil
CTZ 0.2oz 40min
CTZ 0.1oz 20min
CTZ 0.2oz 0min (The CTZ hops are cryo pellets...AA 25.3%, so won't need much)
OG 1.054
FG WTF knows, I never rush my yeast, and I always get pretty dang high attenuation so I'm guessing 1.010 or so for roughly 5.7% ABV