Friday, June 29, 2012

What Now?

As the title suggests, I'm a bit stuck as to what to do with this Porter.  Don't get me wrong, its good, just not great.  Its a dry, true-to-style, robust porter, with no hot alcohols, just the right touch of hop flavor, and a deep, rich mouthfeel.  The Black Patent malt seems to be at the right level, giving some sharpness, but not enough to call it astringent or harsh.  I think it needs just a touch of something else...but what?

Crystal 40? Chocolate?  They are the only components that will have the effect on the character I feel is missing from the beer.  Maybe the 40, which would make it more caramely (is that a word?); Maybe the chocolate, which would add some richness and...well...chocolate flavor, but that can build on the harshness that just lingers beneath the surface in this style.

I really have no idea.  I guess I'll just have to start with the Crystal, taste it, and go from there.  Its a really good beer though, so at least I'm getting close.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Porter Time

This week's brew was the second Pale.  As mentioned, I simply doubled the hop additions all the way through.  I also did a 90 minute boil.  The more research I do, the more I find that the extra half hour at the beginning of the boil makes better beer.  I haven't had the chance to taste any of the ones I've done this with, but that will change after today, as the 3rd Porter is ready to go.

I have high hopes for both of these beers.  I liked the faint flavors and aroma present in the first Pale, and I'm hoping to get that significantly bumped up in this one.  As for the Porter, I liked the taste of the young beer during bottling, so I feel like this might be the one.

Either way, I'm brewing another Porter this weekend, but the result of today's tasting will determine wether I'm doing a repeat to determine reproducability, or a new recipe.

Here's the Pale:
-1.5lbs Pale Ale Malt
-0.4oz Willamette @60
-0.8oz Willamette @15
-0.8oz Willamette @0
-5g Rehydrated US-05

Friday, June 22, 2012

It's About Time One Went to Plan

The Pale Ale was ready for tasting this past weekend, so I invited my brewing partner over and we tried it out.  The Willamette hops didn't give quite the amount of flavor I was expecting, nor did they bitter the brew enough.  I was hoping for some lighter bitterness, so I could just bump that up, but I really wanted that soft, pleasant flavor and aroma that Willamettes carry, and it was only slightly there.  For the next batch, I'm doubling all of the additions.  If that doesn't give me what I'm looking for, I will have to scrap the SMaSH Idea for this one, and add some other hops to augment the Willamette.

As for the brewday, I definitely suck a little bit less each time.  This was the second attempt at the American Wheat.  I used Citra hops, a more potent American cousin of the Tettnanger I was using before, and 60% wheat instead of an equal 50/50 split.  Recipe:

-10oz 2-Row
-15oz Wheat
-0.1oz Citra @ 60
-0.05oz Citra @ 15
-0.1oz Citra @ 5

As with the Wheats before, the yeast chewed through this like it was nothing.  So far, I think the only beers that used the blowoff tube were the Wheats.  I've heard of people using at least a little wheat malt in every recipe.  Apparently, the effect it has on the yeast, and the boost to head retention can really improve the finished product.  It can also, however, add some cloudiness.  Not a really big deal to me, mind you, but its worth mentioning.

This week is the second Pale, and I'm bottling the Stout.  This is the last week of having nothing to taste, since every subsequent one has a bottle, sample, and brew scheduled...except the week I'm at the Jersey Shore, pumpin' my fist- but not my gas.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Brewing the Darkest, and Tasting the Lightest

The Stout brewday went pretty well.  I got my now-normal 88% efficiency in the mash, and the numbers ended up perfect.  I boiled this one for 90 mins, as was suggested in a few places.  The hop schedule, a big one, only went from 60 minutes in the recipe, but I tossed in the bitterring charge at the 90 minute mark...oops, force of habit.  It's ok though, because it didn't change the IBUs at all.

-1.5lbs 2-row
-2.4oz Roasted Barley
-2.4oz Chocolate
-2.4oz Crystal 40L
-0.25oz Warrior @ 90
-0.2oz Cascade @ 30
-0.2oz Cascade @ 0

This should be a deep, dark, roasty, hoppy beer with a lot of character.

Today marked two weeks since the Wheat went into bottles, so I opened one to see what I had made.  It's kind of boring actually.  There is very little wheat character, and almost no hops at all.  I think for the next batch, brewing this weekend, is going to have more wheat malt- maybe 60% as opposed to 50% of the grains.  I'm also going to abandon the Tettnanger hops and throw in an American variety to give it more character.,,I just have to choose which one.  The beer also lacked the clean character I was expecting from the Safale US-05, so I will have to treat the yeast a little better from now on.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Taking a Break From Studying to Brew

I take the state Nursing Boards in about two weeks, so I've been studying a lot lately.  To break the monotony of answering (or attempting to answer) question after question after question, I ran to the homebrew shop this morning to grab ingredients for the stout.  I'll probably brew it tomorrow, studying while I wait for the mash and boil to finish.

As I mentioned before, I use BrewPal on the iPhone to store and develop my recipes, and I went on it today to find a completely different app.  I spent some time tonight learning how to use it, and so far it seems great.  I am going to use some of the new features during tomorrow's brew.

I'm sort of excited for this one, not just because I LOVE a good stout, but because I have the chance to monitor the volume, gravity, and everything else that may be effecting the efficiency problems I've been having.  I planned this batch around the 85% efficiency I've gotten the last few times.  I think if I stir the wort pre-boil, I will see the increased gravity I've been missing previously.  After that, I'll check out the volume throughout to figure my boil off rate.  My numbers should be pretty predictable after that.

It has been said in more than one place that these efficiencies can actually negatively effect the beers one brews...God, I hope not.

Monday, June 4, 2012

I Hope I Get Better At This

As I'm brewing the first installment of the American Brown, I find that the gravity is AGAIN in a range that puts my efficiency at like 85 %.  Its a little confusing, because I definitely checked the gravity at the beginning, and it was perfect.  I am trying to remember if I stirred the wort before checking the gravity or not, but I'm not even sure there would be that much difference if I did or not.  Anyway, here's the recipe:

-1.6lbs Maris Otter
-0.1lbs Chocolate Malt
-0.15lbs Crystal 40
-0.15 Brown Malt
-0.1oz Columbus Hops @ 60 mins
-0.15oz Columbus Hops @ 10 mins

This time, I rehydrated the yeast to give it a head start in the finished wort.  Also, to avoid the crap from last time, I just stuck with the results and went with having a stronger beer...not a terrible thing, but it does take me out of the BJCP guidelines for the style...meh.

The Pale went into bottles as well, so That will be ready in a few weeks.  The taste of the young product was amazing.  I am really hoping it turns out as well as I think it will.

I think I should put up a post detailing my process, just to document it if nothing else.