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- THE CAT'S MEOW:
- BEER RECIPES FROM THE USENET HOMEBREW DIGEST ARCHIVES
-
- By the Subscribers of the Homebrew Digest
- Edited by Mark Stevens and Karl Lutzen
-
-
-
-
- PAGE ii
-
-
-
-
- The Cat's Meow is a compilation of recipes from the Homebrew Digest
- archives. This compilation may be stored in electronic form on any
- computer system or transmitted in its original form to any interested
- party provided that the book is not altered in any way, that this
- copyright notice is preserved, and that no fees are charged for it.
- Commercial use of this publication is strictly forbidden without the
- express permission of the Digest coordinator or his designee. This
- book is intended for the free sharing of information between members
- of the homebrewing community, as such it may be freely copied, dis-
- tributed, and used by any homebrewer, homebrewing club, or homebrew
- supply shop, without charge.
-
- Copyright 1991 by the Homebrew Digest. All rights reserved.
- First edition, February 1991.
-
- Electronic copies of this document are available as compressed
- PostScript files (*.Z), and compressed plain text from the Homebrew
- Digest archives via anonymous ftp to: mthvax.cs.miami.edu
-
- Users with problems using the archive should send E-mail to:
- aem@mthvax.cs.miami.edu
-
- Homebrewers without network access can get copies of this compilation
- in various electronic forms (or as hardcopy) by writing (please
- enclose SASE) to either:
-
- Macintosh users: Mark Stevens, P.O. Box 405, Glenn Dale, Maryland
- 20769.
- DOS users: Karl Lutzen, Rt. #6 Box 419, Rolla, Missouri 65401.
-
- Comments, corrections, or questions about this document can be sent to
- Mark Stevens via E-mail to: stevens@stsci.edu or to Karl Lutzen at
- lutzen@apollo.physics.umr.edu. GEnie users can send GE Mail to:
- M.STEVENS21
-
-
-
-
- PAGE iii
-
-
-
-
- Acknowledgments
-
-
- First and foremost, thanks are due to all of the subscribers of the
- Homebrew Digest who contribute their collective experience, tips,
- techniques, and of course, recipes. Through this sharing we improve
- our homebrewing skills and our knowledge of beer and the brewing
- industry. The digest would not be possible without the dedicated work
- of Rob Gardner, the digest coordinator; we all owe Rob tremendous
- praise for diligently collecting articles, collating them, and dis-
- tributing the daily digest to a list of well over 1,000 subscribers.
- Thank you Rob. Special thanks are also due to A.E. Mossberg who main-
- tains the digest archives at Miami. Without these archives much of the
- collective wisdom of the Homebrew Digest would be lost---especially to
- future subscribers.
-
-
-
-
- PAGE iv
-
-
-
- Early Scottish Ale
- ------------------
-
- Thrice the brinded cat hath mewed.
-
- Thrice and once the hedge-pig whined.
-
- Harpier cries. 'Tis time, 'tis time.
-
- Round about the caldron go:
- In the poisoned entrails throw.
- Toad, that under cold stone
- Days and nights has thirty-one
- Swelt'red venom sleeping got,
- Boil thou first i' th' charmed pot.
-
- Double, double, toil and trouble;
- Fire burn and caldron bubble.
-
- Fillet of a fenny snake,
- In the caldron boil and bake;
- Eye of newt and toe of frog,
- Wool of bat and tongue of dog,
- Adder's fork and blindworm's sting,
- Lizard's leg and howlet's wing.
- For a charm of pow'rful trouble,
- Like a hell-broth, boil and bubble.
-
- Double, double, toil and trouble;
- Fire burn and caldron bubble.
-
- Scale of dragon, tooth of wolf,
- Witch's mummy, maw and gulf,
- Of the ravined salt-sea shark,
- Root of hemlock digged i' the dark,
- Liver of blaspheming Jew,
- Gall of goat, and slips of yew
- Slivered in the moon's eclipse,
- Nose of Turk and Tartar's lips,
- Finger of birth-strangled babe
- Ditch-delivered by a drab,
- Make the gruel thick and slab:
- Add thereto a tiger's chaudron,
- For th' ingredients of our caldron.
-
- Double, double, toil and trouble;
- Fire burn and caldron bubble.
-
- --- by William Shakespeare, in the true homebrew spirit
-
-
-
-
- PAGE v
-
-
-
-
-
- Contents
- Introduction vi
- Chapter 1: Pale Ale 1
- Chapter 2: Pale Lager 26
- Chapter 3: Wheat, Steam, and Rauchbier 35
- Chapter 4: Stout and Porter 44
- Chapter 5: Bock and Dark Lager 78
- Chapter 6: Dopplebock and Barleywine 82
- Chapter 7: Herbal and Spiced Beer 90
- Chapter 8: Fruit Flavored Beer 102
- Chapter 9: Specialty Ales 116
- Chapter 10: Mead and Other Beverages 128
- Appendix A: Bibliography 148
- Appendix B: Sources of Supplies 152
- Appendix C: Beginners Guide to Homebrewing 168
-
-
-
-
- PAGE vi
-
-
-
-
- Introduction
-
-
-
- The digest began back in 1988 with calls for a compiled book of reci-
- pes first surfacing in Digest #77. Since then, there have been sever-
- al pleas for a compiled source of recipes, and several offers to cre-
- ate such a compilation. None have yet surfaced.
-
- The recipes in this book are ordered by general categories, although
- these are somewhat artificial and not always cohesive. For example,
- Chapter 3 covers styles that do not fit neatly into another category,
- yet bear little relation to each other---steam beer bears little rela-
- tion to wheat beers. These styles were grouped together because there
- were not enough of any one of these styles to warrant giving them
- their own chapter. Chapters 7-10 are all made up of loosely-related
- styles.
-
- This recipe compilation will hopefully be a useful source of informa-
- tion that serves you long and well. (If anybody wants to do volume 2
- of this compilation, we stopped compiling recipes at issue #572).
-
- In several of these recipes the authors did not fully explain the
- process or did not mention steps and ingredients that theyassume home-
- brewers know about---for example, several recipes do not tell you to
- prime with 1/2 to 3/4 cup of corn sugar, even though that is common
- practice among most homebrewers on the net. Most recipes are 5-gallon
- batches unless otherwise specified. If you are unsure about how any
- beer is produced, we suggest consulting a general homebrewing text
- such as Charlie Papazian's Complete Joy of Homebrewing (a brief bibli-
- ography is provided at the end of this book). One aspect of these
- recipes that we did not make consistent is the authors' choice of
- hops units. Many homebrewers still prefer to measure hops by the
- ounce, while others prefer to use more exact measurements such as the
- AAU, HBU, or IBU. These are all related to the amount of alpha acid
- in the hops; basically, 1 ounce of hops with 1% alpha is 1 AAU. If
- you use 2 ounces of Cascades hops with an alpha of 5.2%, then you are
- adding 10.4 AAUs of hops. (See Miller's Complete Handbook of Home
- Brewing for more information about hops units or the 1990 special hops
- issue of Zymurgy magazine).
-
- Cheers!
-
- Mark Stevens and Karl Lutzen
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 1: PALE ALE
-
-
-
- Pale ales are one of the most popularly brewed styles among Homebrew
- Digest subscribers. This chapter includes the substyles India Pale
- Ale, and Bitter. The pale ale style is generally brewed with 2-row
- pale malt for a full mash recipe, or with light extract for the more
- basic recipes. The beer is generally characterized by a light yellow
- or golden color, although some will range to a coppery color (espe-
- cially among India Pale Ales) depending on the types and amounts of
- specialty grains added as an adjunct. These styles are typically
- well-hopped, usually with Fuggles, East Kent Goldings, or perhaps
- Willamette varieties. Fermentation is carried out at warmer tempera-
- tures, typically 60-70 degrees. For more information about the pale
- ale style, see Terry Foster's Pale Ale, Fred Eckhardt's The Essentials
- of Beer Style, (both available from the Association of Brewers) gener-
- al beer texts such as Michael Jackson's World Guide to Beer.
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- 1
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- Clara Bell
-
- Author: Doug Roberts (dzzr@lanl.gov)
-
- Digest: September 2, 1989, Issue #244
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds light, unhopped syrup
- 1 pound Cara-pils malt, cracked
- 1 pound light crystal malt, cracked
- 1-1/2 ounces Hallertauer hops pellets
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon citric acid
- 2-1/2 teaspoons yeast nutrient
- 2 tablespoons Irish moss
- 2 packs Munton & Fison yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Put cara-pils and crystal malt in 2 gallon pot with 170-180 degree
- water for one hour, stir occasionally. Sparge into boiling pot with
- enough water to bring volume to 3-1/2 gallons. Add syrup and 1 ounce
- of hops. Boil one hour, adding Irish moss in last 1/2 hour and 1/2
- ounce hops in last 10 minutes. Add salt, citric acid, and nutrient.
- Put in primary with enough water to bring volume to 5 gallons. Pitch
- yeast at about 75 degrees.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is simple, yet a little different from any of my previous batch-
- es. Ingredients were ordered from Great Fermentations of Santa Rosa---
- great company...good stuff and two-day delivery.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.059
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 2
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- Dry Ale
-
- Author: Martin Lodahl (pacbell!pbmoss!mal@hplabs.HP.COM)
- Digest: July 18, 1989, Issue #203
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3 pounds light Scottish malt extract
- 3 pounds 2-row pale malt
- 9 AAU Kent Goldings hops
- Edme ale yeast
- 1 teaspoon gelatin
- 1 ounce PolyClar-AT
- 1 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- This beer was made using the small-scale mash procedure described by
- Miller in The Complete Handbook of Home Brewing.
-
- Comments:
-
- This beer had an unpleasant "dry" feeling to it and left me thirsty.
- Possibly my sparging procedure could be at fault with too much hot
- water being passed over the grains. It is also possible that the
- yeast was too attenuative or that the fermentation temperatures were
- too high (ambient temperature fluctuated between 70 and 90 degrees).
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 3
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- Yeast Test Recipe
-
- Author: Jeff Casey (casey@alcvax.pfc.mit.edu)
- Digest: October 8, 1990, Issue #512
-
- Ingredients:
- 6.6 pounds M&F light unhopped malt extract
- 3/4 pound M&F light unhopped spray
- 3/4 pound crystal malt
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 2 ounces clusters hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce cascades hops (finish)
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 7-gallon recipe. Steep crystal malt while bringing water to
- a boil. Remove malt and add extract. Boil.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is a 7-gallon recipe that was divided into 7 1-gallon fermenters
- for the purpose of testing different yeasts. Fermentation was carried
- out at 75-85 degrees. Best results were obtained with Edme ale yeast
- which was well-rounded and slightly sweet. Some diacetyl, but nice
- balance. Whitbread ale yeast was lighter and crisper, but had a poor-
- er head and some esters. CWE ale yeast was very dry but had a good
- head and no esters---fermentation was frighteningly fast.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: varied
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 4
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- Pale Ale
-
- Author: Rob Bradley (bradley@dehn.math.nwu.edu)
- Digest: September 26, 1990, Issue #504
-
- Ingredients:
-
-
- 7-8 pounds English 2-row malt
- 1/2-1 pound crystal malt
- 3 ounces Fuggles hops (boil)
- 3/4 ounce Hallertauer hops (finish)
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- You'll get good yield and lots of flavor from English malt and a 1-
- stage 150 degree mash. In the boil, I added the finishing hops in
- increments: 1/4 ounce in last 30 minutes, 1/4 ounce in last 15 min-
- utes, and 1/4 ounce at the end (steep 15 minutes) don't have to be
- Fuggles; almost any boiling hops will do, I usually mix Northern
- Brewer with Fuggles or Goldings (just make sure you get .12-.15 alpha)
- Conversion will probably only take 60 minutes rather than 90. Depend-
- ing on when you stop the mash your gravity may vary as high as 1.050.
- That's a lot of body!
-
- Comments:
-
- This is a simple all-grain recipe for a good pale ale that lets the
- beginner concentrate on the mashing process. Hallertauer may not be
- traditional for ales, but neither is a modern piano for sonatas. But
- I think Beethoven himself would have used one if he had one.
-
- Method: Full mash (infusion)
- Original Gravity: varies; up to 1.050
- Final Gravity: varies; up to 1.020
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 5
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- Pale Ale
-
- Author: Alex Jenkins (atj@mirror.tmc.com)
- Digest: January 24, 1989, Issue #57
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 pounds pale malt
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 3-1/2 pounds pale dry extract
- 1-1/3 pound light brown sugar
- 1 ounce Willamette hops (boil)
- 1-1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1 ounce Clusters hops pellets
- Red Star ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash pale malt, crystal malt, and gypsum in 2-3/4 gallons of 170
- degree water; this should give initial heat of 155 degrees (pH 5.0).
- Maintain temperature at 140-155 degrees for 2 hours. Sparge. To
- wort, add extract and brown sugar. Boil with Willamette hops. After
- 15 minutes add Hallertauer and Irish moss. Dry hop with clusters and
- steep. When cool, add wort to carboy and pitch yeast.
-
-
- The posted recipe called for 4 pounds of dry extract with 2
- cups reserved for priming. This seemed excessive and a good
- way to get exploding bottles, so we reduced the amount of
- extract to 3-1/2 pounds and assumed that standard priming
- techniques would be used, maybe replacing corn sugar with
- 3/4 to 1 cup of malt extract.
- --- Ed.
-
- Comments:
-
- Notice that I screwed up the hops: Clusters are for bittering, and
- Willamette (or Fuggles) for aromatic.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: 1.048
- Final Gravity: 1.011
- Primary Ferment: 23 days
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 6
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-
- Too Sweet Ale
-
- Author: Bill Pemberton (flash@virginia.edu)
- Digest: April 13, 1990, Issue #398
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 3.3 pounds unhopped amber extract
- 3.3 pounds unhopped light extract
- 1-1/2 ounce Northern Brewers hops (boil)
- 1/4 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- Whitbread ale yeast
-
- Comments:
-
- This produced a wonderful beer, except that it was just too sweet for
- my likings. I shouldn't complain too much, all my friends thought it
- was great! I tried several variation of this, and all worked out
- well, but were too sweet for me. Several people suggested cutting
- back on the crystal and I may try that. I have also tried sing a
- lager yeast to create a steam beer.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 7
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- KGB Bitters
-
- Author: Andy Wilcox (andy@mosquito.cis.ufl.edu)
- Digest: May 9, 1990, Issue #415
-
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- Ingredients:
-
- 1 can Alexanders Sun Country pale malt extract
- 3.3 pounds Northwestern Amber malt extract
- 1/2 pound dark crystal malt
- 3 ounces CFJ-90 Fresh hops
- 1/4 teaspoon Irish moss
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Start grains in brewpot with cool water. Remove when boil commences.
- Add malt extract and 1-1/2 ounce of hops. Boil 1 hour. Strain out
- boiling hops and add 1/2 ounce more hops and Irish moss. Boil 5 min-
- utes. Remove from heat and add another 1/2 ounce of hops. Steep 10
- minutes and cool. Strain wort into primary fermenter with cold water
- to make 5 gallons. Add final 1/2 ounce of hops.
-
- Comments:
-
- Water was filtered with a simple activated carbon system. This seems
- to make a big difference. Amateur judge commented, "Beautiful color.
- A bit under carbonated. Great hop nose and finishes very clean. Good
- balance with malt and hops, but lighten up on finishing hops a bit and
- it's perfect. Very marketable."
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 8
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- Pale Ale #2
-
- Author: Todd Enders
- Digest: May 15, 1990, Issue #417
-
- Procedure:
-
- Recipe makes 2 gallons. Mash in 5 quarts water at 140 degrees, main-
- tain temperature of 150-152 degrees for 2 hours. Mash out 5 minutes at
- 168 degrees. Sparge in 2-1/2 gallons at 160 degrees. Boil 90 min-
- utes. Add boiling hops 45 minutes into boil.
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2-1/2 pounds pale ale malt
- 2/5 pound 80L crystal malt
- 1/2 ounce Perle hops (7.6 alpha) (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Perle hops (finish)
- Wyeast #1028: London Ale
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: 1.041
- Final Gravity: 1.010
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- Pale After Math Ale
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- Author: Ken van Wyk (ken@oldale.pgh.pa.us)
- Digest: May 16, 1990, Issue #418
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds American classic light extract
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 2 pounds British pale malt
- 3 ounces Fuggles leaf hops
- 1 ounce Cascade leaf hops
- 2 teaspoons gypsum
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1 pack MEV high-temperature British ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash grains at 155 degrees. Sparge with 170 degrees water. Boil,
- adding extract and boiling hops; the hops were added in stages, 1
- ounce at 50 minutes, 1 ounce at 30 minutes, and 1 ounce at 20 minutes.
- The Cascade hops were sprinkled in over the last 10 minutes of the
- boil.
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- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: 1.054
- Final Gravity: 1.018
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- The Drive Pale Ale
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- Author: Dave Baer (dsbaer@Sun.COM)
- Digest: February 13, 1989, Issue #73
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- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds light, unhopped malt extract
- 5 pounds light dry malt extract
- 2 cups corn sugar
- 3/4 cup medium crystal malt
- 1/4 cup black patent malt
- 3-3/4 ounce Cascade hops pellets (4.4 alpha)
- 1-1/5 ounce Willamette hops pellets (4.0 alpha)
- Whitbread ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 10-gallon recipe; cut ingredients in half for 5 gallons.
- Steep grains in a mesh bag until water reaches boiling. Remove
- grains. Follow standard extract brewing process, adding extract and
- Cascade hops. I boiled the wort in an 8-gallon pot and added 4 gal-
- lons of cold water. Pitch yeast at about 80 degrees. I fermented
- this in a 20-gallon open container for 4 days, then racked to glass
- carboys for 24 days.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is a pale ale recipe I used for my class. I used M&F pale ex-
- tract and grains were for demonstration more than flavor. I suggest
- doubling grain quantities if you want to get something out of them.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.047
- Final Gravity: 1.010
- Primary Ferment: 4 days
- Secondary Ferment: 24 days
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- 11
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- Killer Party Ale
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- Author: A.E. Mossberg (aem@mthvax.miami.edu)
- Digest: March 7, 1989, Issue #95
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2 cans Pilsner/Lager or American light malt
- 15 cups corn sugar
- 2 jars Lyle's golden syrup (22 oz.)
- 2-1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops
- 2 pounds flaked maize
- 1 pack BrewMagic
- yeast
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- Procedure:
-
- In 1 gallon water, boil malt, golden syrup, sugar and 1-1/2 ounce hops
- for 8 minutes. Add remaining hops and boil another 2 minutes. Pour
- into primary fermenter with 2 gallons water. Bring another gallon of
- water to a boil and add flaked maize. Turn off heat and 1/3 pack of
- BrewMagic. Let sit 10 minutes. Add another 1/3 pack of BrewMagic.
- Let sit 10 more minutes. Strain maize into primary fermenter, and
- rinse with cold water. Discard maize. Fill primary to 5 gallon mark.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe comes from Craig McTyre at Wine & Brew By You. The Lyle's
- syrup is available in many grocery stores, usually located near the
- pancake syrup. BrewMagic is some sort of yeast nutrient/additive. It
- is available from Wine & Brew By You.
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- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.090
- Final Gravity: 1.015
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 12
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- Summer Pale Ale
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- Author: Jackie Brown (Brown@MSUKBS.BITNET)
- Digest: April 24, 1989, Issue #134
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 8 pounds 2-row pale malt
- 1 pound Munich malt
- 1/2 cup dextrin malt
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 20 grams Nugget leaf hops (14 alpha)
- 15 grams Brambling leaf hops
- pinch Irish moss
- 1 pack Edme ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Use the standard temperature-controlled mash procedure described in
- Papazian. Use a 30 minute protein rest at 122 degrees, 20 minutes at
- 152 degrees, and 20 minutes at 158 degrees. Sparge with 4 gallons of
- 180 degree water. Boil 1 hour with Nugget hops. Add Irish moss in
- last 10 minutes. Remove from heat and steep Brambling hops for 15
- minutes. Cool wort and pitch.
-
- Comments:
-
- This ale is light in color, but full-bodied. If you want an amber
- color, add a cup of caramel malt. I get a strong banana odor in most
- of my ales (from the Edme I believe) which subsides after 2-3 weeks in
- the bottle. If you don't have the capacity for 9 pounds of malt, you
- could substitute some extract for the pale malt. Just thinking about
- this makes me want to speed home and have a cool one.
-
- Method: Full mash (decoction)
- Original Gravity: 1.045
- Final Gravity: 1.015
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
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- 13
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- Perle Pale
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- Author: Doug Roberts (roberts%studguppy@lanl.gov)
- Digest: March 15, 1990, Issue #378
-
- Ingredients:
- 8 pounds Klages malt
- 1 pound flaked barley
- 1/2 pound toasted Klages malt
- 1/2 pound Cara-pils malt
- 1-1/2 ounce Perle hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Willamette hops (finish)
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- 14 grams Muntona ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- The 1/2 pound of Klages malt was toasted in a 350 degree oven for 10
- minutes. The mash was done using Papazian's temperature-controlled
- method. The Perle hops equal 12.4 AAUs. The Willamette hops are
- added after the boil, while chilling with an immersion chiller. The
- yeast is rehydrated in 1/2 cup of 100 degree water.
-
- Comments:
-
- Perle pale was a beautiful light-golden ale, crisp yet full-bodied.
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 14
-
-
-
-
- Mild Ale
-
- Author: Darryl Richman (darryl@ism.isc.com)
- Digest: March 5, 1990, Issue #371
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 pounds Klages 2-row malt
- 4 pounds mild malt
- 2 pounds crystal malt (80L)
- 1/2 pound English pale malt
- 1/2 pound flaked barley
- 1/5 pound chocolate malt
- 1 ounce Willamette leaf hops (5.9% alpha)
- 1/8 ounce Cascade leaf hops (6.7% alpha)
- 1/8 ounce Eroica leaf hops (13.4% alpha)
- 1/2 ounce Willamette leaf hops (finish)
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Water was treated with 2 gm each MgSO4, CaSO4, KCl, and CaCO3. Mash
- grains in 3 gallons of water at 134 degrees. Hold 120-125 degrees for
- 55 minutes, raise to 157 degrees for 55 minutes. Raise to 172 degrees
- for 15 minutes. Sparge with 5-3/4 gallons water. Boil 15 minutes. Add
- bittering hops. Boil 55 minutes. Add finishing hops and boil 5 more
- minutes. Chill and pitch with Sierra Nevada or Wyeast Northern White-
- shield yeast. Ferment and bottle or keg.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is the only beer I can make 10 gallons of on my stove. I mash and
- boil 5 gallons and then add 5 gallons of cooling water. The Wyeast
- makes this a beer a bit sweet and rich beyond its gravity. Emphasis is
- on the malt, with crystal and chocolate bringing up the rear; hops
- were noticeable, but not in the foreground.
-
- Method: Full mash (decoction)
- Original Gravity: 1.031
- Final Gravity: 1.011
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 15
-
-
-
-
- India Pale Ale
-
- Author: Todd Enders (enders@plains.nodak.edu)
- Digest: April 19, 1990, Issue #402
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2-1/2 pounds pale malt
- 5 ounces crystal malt (80L)
- 5.5 AAUs bittering hops (1 ounce of 5.5% Willamette)
- 1/2 ounce finishing hops (Willamette)
- Wyeast #1028: London ale
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 2-gallon batch. Mash in 5 quarts 132 degrees (140 degree
- strike heat). Adjust mash pH to 5.3. Boost temperature to 150 degrees.
- Mash 2 hours, maintaining temperature at 146-152 degrees. Mash out 5
- minutes at 168 degrees. Sparge with 2 gallons of 165 degree water.
- Boil 90 minutes, adding hops in last hour. Add finishing hops 5 min-
- utes before end of boil. Ferment at 70 degrees, 6 days in primary, 4
- days in secondary.
-
- Comments:
-
- If you haven't tried mashing yet, you really should. You can start
- small and grow as equipment and funds permit. Also, by starting
- small, you don't have a large sum invested in equipment if you decide
- mashing isn't for you.
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: 1.043
- Final Gravity: 1.008
- Primary Ferment: 6 days
- Secondary Ferment: 4 days
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 16
-
-
-
-
- Special Bitter
-
- Author: Chuck Cox (bose!synchro!chuck@uunet.UU.NET)
- Digest: December 18, 1990, Issue #556
-
- Ingredients:
- 15 pounds pale unhopped dry extract
- 2 pounds crystal malt
- 1 pound flaked barley
- 1 pound pale malt
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 4-1/2 HBUs Fuggles hops (boil)
- 14 HBUs Northern Brewer hops
- 5 HBUs Cascade hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Fuggles hops (finish)
- 1 ounce East Kent Goldings hops
- 26 grams Fuggles hops (dry hop)
- 40 grams East Kent Goldings (dry)
- Young's yeast culture
- beechwood chips
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 10-gallon partial mash recipe. Use standard procedures,
- brewing about 7 gallons of wort in a 10-gallon kettle, followed by a
- 7-gallon primary and 2 5-gallon secondaries, then keg (or bottle)
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 17
-
-
-
-
- 1990 Christmas Ale
-
- Author: Chuck Cox (bose!synchro!chuck@uunet.UU.NET)
- Digest: December 18, 1990, Issue #556
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 9.9 pounds pale unhopped liquid extract
- 6.6 pounds liquid wheat extract
- 3 pounds honey
- 1 pound flaked barley
- 1 pound pale malt
- 1 pound malted wheat
- 10 grams orange peel
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 14 HBUs Chinook hops (boil)
- 7 HBUs Northern Brewer (boil)
- 1 ounce Kent Goldings (finish)
- 1 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- Young's yeast culture
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 9-gallon partial mash recipe. Use standard procedures,
- brewing about 7 gallons of wort in a 10-gallon kettle, followed by a
- 7-gallon primary and 2 5-gallon secondaries, then keg (or bottle)
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
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-
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-
- 18
-
-
-
-
- Decent Extract Pale Ale
-
- Author: Florian Bell (florianb%tekred.cna.tek.com)
- Digest: February 11, 1989, Issue #72
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds Steinbart's amber ale extract
- 1 pound cracked crystal malt
- 1/8 pound cracked roasted malt
- 2 ounces Cascade or other strong hops
- 1/2 ounce Kent Goldings hops
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Add cracked grains to 2 gallons cold water. Bring to boil and prompt-
- ly strain out grains. Add extract and Cascade hops. Boil 30 minutes.
- Add Kent Goldings hops in last five minutes.
-
- Comments:
-
- This brew results in a chill haze, which I don't pay any attention to
- since I don't care (I don't wash my windshield very often either) I am
- so impressed with this ale that I can't seem to make enough of it.
- can't seem to make enough of it. This is a good pale ale, but not an
- excellent pale ale. It lacks sweetness and aroma.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 19
-
-
-
-
- Hot Weather Ale
-
- Author: Florian Bell (florianb%tekred.cna.tek.com)
- Digest: April 19, 1989, Issue #132
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3 pounds pale malted barley
- 3 pounds Blue Ribbon malt extract
- 2 ounces Willamette hops
- 1/2 ounce Kent Goldings hops
- 1 pack Red Star ale yeast
- 1 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash the 3 pounds of plain malted barley using the temperature-step
- process for partial grain recipes described in Papazian's book. Boil
- 30 minutes, then add the Blue Ribbon extract (the cheap stuff you get
- at the grocery store) Add Willamette hops and boil another 30 minutes.
- Add Kent Goldings in last 5 minutes. When at room temperature, pitch
- yeast. Ferment at about 68 degrees using a 2-stage process.
-
- Comments:
-
- This turned out refreshing, light in body and taste, with a beautiful
- head (I used 1 cup corn sugar in priming) goodness of the outcome.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- 20
-
-
-
-
- Really Incredible Ale
-
- Digest: T. Andrews (ki4pv!tanner@bikini.cis.ufl.edu)
- Author: August 11, 1989, Issue #225
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5-7 pounds pale malt
- 3 pounds crystal malt
- 2 pounds wheat
- 2 ounces Northern Brewer hops
- 1 ounce Hallertauer hops
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash all grains together. Add Northern Brewer at beginning of boil.
- Boil 90 minutes. During last 1/2 hour, add the Hallertauer hops. In
- last 15 minutes add the Cascade.
-
- Comments:
-
- The wheat helps make a beer very suitable to a warm climate. This has
- been a hot summer; it has topped 100 degrees (in the shade) several
- times.
-
- Method: Full mash (infusion)
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
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-
-
- 21
-
-
-
-
- British Bitter
-
- Author: Fred Condo (fredc@pro-humanist.cts.com)
- Digest: October 31, 1990, Issue #528
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 to 6 pounds Alexander's pale malt extract
- 1/2 pound crystal malt, crushed
- 10 ounces dextrose (optional)
- 1-1/4 ounces Cascade hops (boil)
- 1/4 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- Munton & Fison ale yeast
- corn sugar for priming
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep crystal malt and sparge twice. Add extract and dextrose and
- bring to boil. Add Cascade hops and boil 60 minutes. In last few
- minutes add remaining 1/4 ounce of Cascade (or dry hop, if desired).
- Chill and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- This really shouldn't be too highly carbonated. This is a well-
- balanced brew with good maltiness and bitterness. It was good when
- fresh, albeit cloudy, but this is okay in a pale ale. After 2 months
- of refrigeration, it is crystal clear and still delicious! (And
- there's only 1 bottle left.) By the way, Munton & Fison yeast is very
- aggressive---fermentation can be done in 24-72 hours. I hope you like
- this as much as I do.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.058
- Final Gravity: 1.022
- Primary Ferment: 4 days
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 22
-
-
-
-
- Six Cooks Ale
-
- Author: Jeffrey Blackman (blackman@hpihouz.cup.hp.com)
- Digest: October 31, 1990, Issue #528
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 10 pounds English pale malt (DME) extract
- 4 ounces Cascade hops pellets (boil)
- 2 ounces Hallertauer hops pellets (finish)
- 4 teaspoons gypsum
- 2 packs Edme ale yeast
- 1-1/2 cups corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe makes 10 gallons. Bring 3 gallons of water to a boil. Add
- 4 teaspoons of gypsum, four ounces of hops, and 10 pounds of the DME
- extract. Bring to boil. Boil 45 minutes. Add 2 ounces of Haller-
- tauer hops in last 1 minute of boil. Strain wort into large vessel
- containing additional 7 gallons of water (we used a 55 gallon trash
- can). Allow wort to cool and siphon into 5-gallon carboys. Add yeast.
-
- Caveat Brewor:
- Trash cans are generally not food-grade plastic, digest
- wisdom calls for avoiding non-food-grade plastic. Brewer
- discretion is advised.
- -Ed.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is more hoppy than most of the Old Style/Schaefer persuasion seem
- to prefer. If you think its too much, cut back.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.030
- Final Gravity: 1.007
- Primary Ferment: 3 weeks
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 23
-
-
-
-
- Bass Ale
-
- Author: Rob Bradley (bradley@math.nwu.edu)
- Digest: October 31, 1990, Issue #528
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6-7 pounds pale malt (2-row)
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 1 pound demarara or dark brown sugar
- 1 ounce Northern Brewer hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Fuggles hops (boil 30 min.)
- 1/2 ounce Fuggles hops (finish)
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is an all-grain recipe---follow the instructions for an infusion
- mash in Papazian, or another text. The Northern Brewer hops are boiled
- for a full hour, the Fuggles for 1/2 hour, and the Fuggles finishing
- hops after the wort is removed from the heat, it is then steeped 15
- minutes.
-
- Comments:
-
- I'm a hophead (as you may have guessed). Purists may object to brown
- sugar in beer, but a careful tasting of Bass reveals brown sugar or
- molasses in the finish---not as strong as in Newcastle, but present.
- British malt, in particular, can easily stand up to a bit of sugar,
- both in flavor and in gravity.
-
- Method: Full mash (infusion)
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 24
-
-
-
-
- Carp Ale
-
- Author: Gary Mason (mason@habs11.enet.dec.com)
- Digest: November 2, 1990, Issue #529
-
- Ingredients:
- 3 pounds Munton & Fison light DME
- 3 pounds M&F amber DME
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 2.6 ounces Fuggles hops (4.7% alpha= 12.22 AAU)
- 1 ounce Kent Goldings hops (5.9% alpha = 5.9 AAU)
- pinch Irish moss
- 1 pack Brewer's Choice #1098 (British ale yeast)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Break seal of yeast ahead of time and prepare a starter solution about
- 10 hours before brewing.
-
- Bring 2 gallons water to boil with crushed crystal malt. Remove crys-
- tal when boil starts. Fill to 6 gallons and add DME. After boiling
- 10 minutes, add Fuggles. At 55 minutes, add a pinch of Irish moss. At
- 58 minutes, add Kent Goldings. Cool (I used an immersion chiller) to
- about 80 degrees. Pitch yeast and ferment for about a week. Rack to
- secondary for 5 days. Keg.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is based on Russ Schehrer's Carp Ale from the 1986 Zymurgy spe-
- cial issue. The beer has a light hops flavor and could use some work
- on the mouth feel. It is also a bit cloudy.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: 1.016
- Primary Ferment: 7 days
- Secondary Ferment: 4 days
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 25
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 2: PALE LAGER
-
-
-
- Lagers do not seem to be brewed by Homebrew Digest subscribers as much
- as other styles, probably because adequate refrigeration is not avail-
- able, it takes longer to ferment and age, and the techniques are not
- as straightforward as ale brewing. Still, lagers are the predominant
- styles in many countries, such as the United States and Germany, so
- homebrewers who want to emulate commercial beers usually find them-
- selves brewing lagers.
-
- Chapter 2 includes the pilsner style, as well as any of the continen-
- tal or American style pale lagers. The beer is typically brewed from
- a 6-row malt and hopped with some of the more delicate hops, such as
- Hallertauer or Saaz. Fermentation typically takes place at lower temp-
- eratures, around 40 degrees.
-
- For more information about the pale ale style, see David Miller's
- Continental Pilsner, Fred Eckhardt's The Essentials of Beer Style,
- (both available from the Association of Brewers), or one of the gen-
- eral beer texts such as Michael Jackson's World Guide to Beer.
-
-
-
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- 26
-
-
-
-
- German Malz Bier
-
- Author: Doug Roberts (dzzr@lanl.gov)
- Digest: January 16, 1991, Issue #566
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds light unhopped syrup
- 2 pounds Cara-pils malt
- 2 pounds light crystal malt
- 1 pound extra rich crystal malt
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer (5.0% alpha)
- 1 ounce Willamette (4.5 alpha)
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon citric acid
- 1 teaspoon yeast nutrient
- 1 tablespoon Irish moss
- Edme ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash cara-pils and crystal malt for 2 hours in 140 degree water.
- Sparge to make 4 gallons. Add syrup and Hallertauer hops. Boil 60
- minutes, adding Irish moss in last 30 minutes. Decant to primary,
- adding enough water to make 5 gallons. Add salt, citric acid, yeast
- nutrient, and dry hop with Willamette hops.
-
- Comments:
-
- A year or so ago I went to a party where the host had about 20 dif-
- ferent types of good beer. One was a German malz bier that was deli-
- cious! It has a wonderful sweet, malty, full-bodied flavor. Working
- on the assumption that its body is achieved with dextrin and crystal
- malt, I cooked up this recipe. The intent is to have all or most of
- the dextrin and caramelized maltose remain after fermentation for the
- malz taste and body.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 27
-
-
-
-
- Munich Style Lager
-
- Author: Norm Hardy (polstra!norm@uunet.UU.NET)
- Digest: October 11, 1990, Issue #515
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds Klages malt
- 3 pounds Vienna malt
- 6 ounces pearl barley
- 1-1/2 ounces Hallertauer leaf hops
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops (finish)
- Wyeast #2206
-
- Procedure:
-
- Soak the pearl barley overnight in the refrigerator, mix it into a
- starchy glue using a blender. Mash the pearl barley with the grains.
- Boil 1-1/2 ounces of Hallertauer with the wort. Add 1/4 ounce of fin-
- ishing hops in last 10 minutes and steep 1/4 ounce after boil is com-
- plete. Pitch yeast at about 76 degrees.
-
- I put the fermenter in fridge for 23 days, then racked to secondary
- for another 49 days before bottling.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is a wonderful Munich-style lager that I would like to think
- rivals Andechs (I aim high).
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: 1.052
- Final Gravity: 1.015
- Primary Ferment: 23 days
- Secondary Ferment: 49 days
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
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-
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-
-
- 28
-
-
-
-
- Lager
-
-
- Author:Doug (dreger@seismo.gps.caltech.edu)
- Digest: October 5, 1990, Issue #511
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds Northwest malt extract
- 1 pound light dry malt
- 1/2 pound Munich malt
- 2 pounds Klages malt
- 1 ounce Hallertauer hops (5.1 alpha)
- 1/4 ounce Nugget hops (11.0 alpha)
- 1 ounce Hallertauer hops (finish)
- Wyeast #2042: Danish
-
- Procedure:
-
- Start yeast ahead of time. Mash Munich and Klages malts together.
- Sparge. Add extract and boiling hops. Boil one hour. Add finishing
- hops. Chill to 75-80 degrees. Pitch yeast. When airlock shows signs
- of activity (about 6 hours) refrigerator at 42 degrees. After one
- week, rack to secondary and ferment at 38 degrees for two more weeks.
- Bottle or keg.
-
- Comments:
-
- This beer tastes great and is very clean. There are, however, two
- things I will do next time: add more bitterness (perhaps 10-11 HBUs),
- and second, add more malt.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 1 week
- Secondary Ferment: 2 weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 29
-
-
-
-
- B.W. Lager
-
- Author: Alex Jenkins (atj@mirror.tmc.com)
- Digest: January 24, 1989, Issue #57
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds cracked lager malt
- 5 pounds amber dry malt extract
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 2500 mg ascorbic acid
- 2 ounces Talisman leaf hops
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer leaf hops
- 1 ounce Willamette hops pellets
- Red Star lager yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Add grain to 2-1/2 gallons of 170 degree water giving an initial heat
- of 155 degrees and a pH of 5.3. Maintain temperature at 130-150
- degrees for 2 hours. Sparge. Bring to boil. Add extract, and
- Talisman hops. In last 20 minutes add Irish moss. In last 10 minutes
- add Hallertauer hops. Strain wort and cool. Add Willamette pellets
- for aroma. Pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- Tastes great, but low alcohol according to the measurements. Nice
- amber lager.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: 1.029
- Final Gravity: 1.020
- Primary Ferment: 30 days
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 30
-
-
-
-
- Lager
-
- Author: Alex Jenkins (atj@mirror.tmc.com)
- Digest: January 24, 1989, Issue #57
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds cracked lager malt
- 1250 mg ascorbic acid
- 3.3 pounds light unhopped John Bull malt extract
- 1-1/2 ounce Northern Brewer hops pellets
- 1 ounce Talisman leaf hops
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1 ounce Willamette hops pellets
- Red Star lager yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Add grain to 2-1/2 gallons 170 degree water giving initial heat of 155
- degrees. Maintain temperature for two hours. Sparge and add malt
- extract. Bring to boil. Add Northern Brewer hops, Talisman hops, and
- Irish moss in last 20 minutes of boil. Dry hop with Willamette pel-
- lets and cool. Add water to make 5 gallons and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- Higher gravity than previous recipe (B.W. Lager) reflecting a more
- effective mash. On day 2 of ferment the bubbler got clogged and was
- replace with blow tube. The resulting beer was fairly amber, not too
- sweet, with a certain dryness in the aftertaste.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: 1.046
- Final Gravity: 1.018
- Primary Ferment: 25 days
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 31
-
-
-
-
- Twelfth Lager
-
- Author: Alex Jenkins (atj@mirror.tmc.com)
- Digest: January 24, 1989, Issue #57
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 10 pounds lager grain
- 4000 mg ascorbic acid
- 1 pound light dry malt extract
- 9 ounces Chinese yellow lump sugar
- 1 ounce Talisman hops (leaf)
- 1 ounce Hallertauer hops pellets
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1 ounce Cascade hops
- Red Star ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Add grain to 3 gallons of 170 degree water giving an initial heat of
- 155 degrees. Mash at 130-155 degrees for 2 hours. Sparge and add ex-
- tract and Chinese lump sugar. Boil. In last 20 minutes add Talisman
- hops. In last 10 minutes add Hallertauer hops and Irish moss.
- Strain. Add Cascade hops and steep. Strain into fermenter when cool
- and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- Slightly hazy and very light colored. This should not lack body.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: 1.043
- Final Gravity: 1.010
- Primary Ferment: 35 days
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 32
-
-
-
-
- Pilsner
-
- Author: Erik Henchal (henchal@wrair.ARPA)
- Digest: April 15, 1989, Issue #128
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4 pound can Mountmellick hopped
- light malt extract
- 3 ounces crystal malt
- 2 teaspoons gypsum
- 1/4 ounce Saaz hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Saaz hops (finish)
- Wyeast #2007
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe makes 5-1/2 gallons. Make 2-quart starter for yeast.
- Steep crystal malt at 170 degrees for 20 minutes in brew water.
- Remove grains. Boil extract and boiling hops for 75 minutes. Add
- finishing hops in last 10 minutes. Conduct primary fermentation at
- 47-49 degrees for 3 weeks. Lager for 4 weeks at 30 degrees.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe has produced one of the finest pilsners I have ever made.
- What could be simpler?
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 3 weeks
- Secondary Ferment: 4 weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 33
-
-
-
-
- Number 17
-
- Author: John Watson (watson@pioneer.arc.nasa.gov)
- Digest: November 21, 1990, Issue #541
-
- Ingredients:
- 3.3 pounds plain light malt extract
- 2.2 pounds maltose
- 3/4 ounce Cascade hops (boil)
- 3/4 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- yeast, cultured from a
- Sierra Nevada bottle
-
- Procedure:
-
- The maltose is a cheap rice-malt mix obtainable from oriental markets.
- Boil malt, hops, and maltose in 2-1/2 gallons of cold water. In last
- 2 minutes, add the finishing hops. The yeast was cultured from a
- bottle of Sierra Nevada pale ale. By the next day, the yeast did not
- seem to start, so I added a packet of Vierrka lager yeast. Rack to
- secondary after one week. After another week, prime with 3/4 cup corn
- sugar and bottle.
-
- Comments:
-
- Color similar to any American lager. Tastes much better, very mellow.
- The goal was to brew 5 gallons of beer while only spending $10. This
- came to about $11. I'm not sure what drives me to such frugalness,
- but having grown up with American beer, sometimes I would rather have
- it with certain foods, like pizza.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.038
- Final Gravity: 1.006
- Primary Ferment: 1 week
- Secondary Ferment: 1 week
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 34
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 3: WHEAT, STEAM AND RAUCHBIER
-
-
-
- Wheat beers, steam beers, and rauchbier have no more in common than
- stout and lambic, yet they are grouped because each is specialty style
- of interest to digest subscribers, yet none is brewed so often that a
- significant number of recipes exist in the digest archives.
-
- The wheat beer style includes both the weisse, common in Berlin, and
- the weizen, common in Munich. Weisse is the lighter of the two, with
- lower starting gravities and a lower wheat to barley ratio (typically
- 1 to 4). Weizen is a fuller-bodied brew and will often contain equal
- portions of wheat and barley malt. Hallertauer is often the predomin-
- ant hops choice for wheat beer, but homebrewers regularly experiment
- with traditionally English hops (such as Willamette) or some of the
- younger U.S. strains. Steam beer is fermented with lager yeast at
- warmer temperatures, and rauchbier shows a hint of smoke, derived from
- either adjuncts such as Wright's Liquid Smoke, or from barbecuing the
- malted barley.
-
- For more information about these styles, see Fred Eckhardt's The
- Essentials of Beer Style, (both available from the Association of
- Brewers), or one of the general beer texts such as Michael Jackson's
- World Guide to Beer.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 35
-
-
-
-
- Weizen? Why Not?
-
- Author: Jason Goldman (jdg@hp-lsd)
- Digest: February 16, 1990, Issue #359
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds Williams wheat extract
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound toasted barley
- 1 pound honey
- 2 ounces Cascades hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascades hops (finish)
- 1 package Wyeast wheat yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Make a 2-quart starter before brewing. Steep crystal and toasted
- barley in 4 gallons water for 40 minutes (use grain bags to make this
- easier). Add extract, honey and bittering hops. Boil wort for 1
- hour. Remove from heat. Add finishing hops and steep 2 minutes.
- Chill and pitch yeast. After 3 days, rack to secondary. Bottle after
- 8 days.
-
- Comments:
-
- This beer was a bit cloudy and should have some Irish moss. I'm not
- really sure what the honey added to this beer (more experimentation is
- in order). However, it turned out so well that I won't omit it in the
- future. This was a very good extract-based recipe (it well nigh evap-
- orated).
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.050
- Final Gravity: 1.012
- Primary Ferment: 3 days
- Secondary Ferment: 5 days
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 36
-
-
-
-
- Ole Bottle Rocket
-
- Author: Wayne Allen (wa%cadillac.cad.mcc.com@mcc.com)
- Digest: January 31, 1990, Issue #348
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds light dry malt extract
- 1/2 pound toasted malt
- 3/4 ounce Northern Brewer hops pellets (boil)
- 1/4 ounce Northern Brewer hops pellets (finish)
- 1 pack lager yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Toast grains on cookie sheet in 350 degree oven for about 10 minutes.
- Crush malt as you would grain. Put in 1-1/2 gallons water and bring
- to boil. Strain out grain. Add extract and boiling hops. In last 2
- minutes of boil add finishing hops. Add to enough water to make 5
- gallons and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- I've made many variations of steam beer, but simple ones like this
- seem to turn out best, not to mention being easy to make. I usually
- use more Northern Brewer than this, but then nobody will eat my chili
- either.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 37
-
-
-
-
- Rauchbier
-
- Author: Ken Weiss (cckweiss@castor.ucdavis.edu)
- Digest: May 18, 1990, Issue #420
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds light dry extract
- 1-1/2 teaspoons liquid smoke
- 1-1/2 ounce Tettnanger hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Tettnanger hops (finish)
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- 2 packs Red Star lager yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil extract, liquid smoke, and boiling hops in 2-3 gallons of water
- for 45 minutes. Add Irish moss and finishing hops and boil 5 more
- minutes. Strain into fermenter, add cold water to make 5 gallons,
- pitch yeast. After 3 days rack to secondary. Allow to ferment an
- additional 3-4 weeks.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is basically a nice light beer, but with a definite smoke after-
- taste. Mainstream, but with a non-commercial twist.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 3 days
- Secondary Ferment: 3-4 weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 38
-
-
-
-
- Anchor Steam-Style Amber
-
- Author: Clay Phipps (hplabs!garth!phipps)
- Digest: June 21, 1990, Issue #444
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds John Bull plain light malt extract
- 1/4-1/2 pound crystal malt
- 2 ounces Northern Brewer hops (11 alpha) (boil)
- 1 ounce Cascade hops (5.6 alpha) (finish)
- 2 packs lager yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Pour 1 gallon water into brewpot. Crush grains and add to brewpot.
- Bring to boil. Remove grains. Add malt extract. Add 1/3 of the
- boiling hops. After 20 minutes, add another 1/3 of hops. After
- another 20 minutes add the last 1/3 of hops. After another 20 min-
- utes, remove from heat and add finishing hops. Cover wort. Pour 3
- gallons cold water into fermenter. Strain wort into fermenter along
- with enough water to make 5-1/2 gallons. Pitch yeast and put in blow-
- off tube or airlock.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe was offered in 1986 by the now-defunct Home Brewer shop
- in San Jose, California, as the best approximation to Anchor Steam
- possible with home-brew-scale extract brewing.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 39
-
-
-
-
- Weizen
-
- Author: Darryl Richman (darryl@ism780c.isc.com)
- Digest: June 26, 1989, Issue #186
-
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 14 pounds wheat malt
- 8 pounds Munich malt
- 6 pounds 2-row malt
- 90 grams Hersbrucker hops (3.4% alpha)
- 10 grams calcium carbonate
- Sierra Nevada yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 15-gallon batch. Our beer was 50% malted wheat, 30% Munich,
- and 20% 2-row malt. Medium soft water was used with the addition of
- 10 grams CaCO4. Mash with 1-1/4 gallons water per pound of grain with
- rests at 120 degrees (1-1/2 hours), 135 degrees for 45 minutes, 148
- degrees for 30 minutes, and 156 degrees until converted. 172 degrees
- for 15 minutes. We took our time with the sparge: 20 minutes to set-
- tle in the lauter tun, at least 30 minutes of recycling, and 1-1/2
- hours to sparge. We cut it off at a gravity of 1.015 because we
- weren't getting sweetness, just grainy notes.
-
- Comments:
-
- The hot break in the boil was the most unbelievable thing I've ever
- seen. It looked like egg drop soup. We took out a sight glass and
- grabbed a bit and the flocks were huge---as much as 1/2 inch in diam-
- eter.
-
- Method: Full mash (decoction)
- Original Gravity: 1.055
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 40
-
-
-
-
- Blow Me Away Holiday Ale
-
- Author: Steve Conklin (...!uunet!ingr!b11!conk!steve)
- Digest: December 8, 1989, Issue #319
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds William's Weizenmalt syrup
- 2 pounds dark DME
- 2-3/4 pounds buckwheat honey
- 1 pound crushed crystal malt
- 1/4 pound crushed chocolate malt
- 2-1/2 ounces Cascade hops (boil)
- 1-1/2 ounces Hallertauer hops 3.6 alpha (boil)
- 3/4 ounce Hallertauer hops (finish)
- 4 teaspoons whole allspice
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- yeast
- 2/3 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Steep grains in 2 gallons water while heating to boil. Remove grains.
- Add extracts and honey. Boil 1 hour with boiling hops, add 1 teaspoon
- Irish moss at 30 minutes. Simmer allspice in water for 3 minutes,
- remove allspice and add water to primary. After fermenting, prime
- with corn sugar and bottle.
-
- This beer turned out very well. It has just a hint of the allspice,
- more in the aroma than the flavor, and is quite sweet tasting. There
- is a slight bitter hops aftertaste, but I think that if it were any
- less bitter, the sweetness would be overpowering. This beer will bring
- color to your cheeks. The spice can be omitted with no great loss.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.090
- Final Gravity: 1.025
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 41
-
-
-
-
- Wheat Amber
-
- Author: Marc San Soucie (wang!mds@uunet.UU.NET)
- Digest: July 1, 1989, Issue #191
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 can Kwoffit Bitter kit (hopped extract)
- 3 pounds light dry malt extract
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound wheat malt
- Fuggles leaf hops
- Kwoffit yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep the crystal and wheat malts. Boil the resulting mixture with
- the Kwoffit kit and the light extract. Add a small amount (up to 1/2
- ounce) of the Fuggles hops in the last minute of the boil.
-
- Comments:
-
- The result is extravagantly tasty---very rich and full-bodied,
- strongly hopped but not tart. I am quickly becoming a believer in the
- value of a little wheat malt for adding flavorful body. It seems to
- work very well with crystal malt. Body, crispness, sweetness, hoppi-
- ness...heaven.
-
- Method:
- Original Gravity:
- Final Gravity:
- Primary Ferment:
- Secondary Ferment:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 42
-
-
-
-
- Not-So-Sweet Beer
-
- Author: William Pemberton (flash@virginia.edu)
- Digest: April 30, 1990, Issue #408
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds M&F amber extract
- 1/4 pound toasted barley
- 1/4 pound crystal malt
- 1-3/4 ounces Northern Brewer hops
- Vierka lager yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep toasted and crystal malts. Boil wort with hops for 45 minutes.
- Chill and pitch. Age in carboy for 2 weeks.
-
- Comments:
-
- This was a steam beer that turned out really well. It hasn't aged
- very long, but I am quite happy with the results.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 43
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 4: STOUT AND PORTER
-
-
-
- Stout and porter are the most popular styles of beer brewed by digest
- subscribers, as evidenced by the number of recipes in this chapter.
- Porter is the older of the two styles, dating back to the early 18th
- century. It is a dark---almost black---brew characterized by a roast
- barley flavor and a fairly high hopping rate. It is typically brewed
- to a starting gravity of about 1.050. Stout is a thicker, heartier
- version of porter that is usually placed in either a dry or a sweet
- subcategory. The sweet stout typically contains unfermentable sugars,
- such as lactose, added. Russian Imperial stouts are significantly
- heavier and stronger than either of the other two substyles. Typical
- stouts are brewed to a starting gravity of about 1.060 while Imperial
- stouts are brewed to starting gravities in excess of 1.100.
-
- For more information about these styles, see Fred Eckhardt's The
- Essentials of Beer Style, (both available from the Association of
- Brewers), or one of the general beer texts such as Michael Jackson's
- World Guide to Beer.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 44
-
-
-
-
- Oatmeal Stout
-
- Author: Patrick Stirling (pms@sfsun.West.Sun.COM)
- Digest: January 29, 1991, Issue #572
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 8 pounds amber malt extract
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound roast barley
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 1 pound steel cut oats
- 2 ounces Eroica hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Fuggles hops (finish)
- Whitbread ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Crack all grains (except oats), add to 2 gallons cold water, add oats,
- bring to boil. Remove grains with strainer when boil is reached. Add
- malt extract and boiling hops. Boil 60 minutes. Add finishing hops
- and boil another minute or so. Remove from heat, let steep 15 min-
- utes. Put 4-6 inches of ice in bottom of plastic fermenter and strain
- wort into fermenter. Sparge. Bring volume to 5-1/4 gallons and mix.
- The temperature should now be below 80 degrees. Rack to 6 gallon
- glass carboy and pitch yeast. Bottle when fermentation is done (about
- 2-3 weeks).
-
- Comments:
-
- I really liked this beer! Dark and smooth with a creamy mouth feel.
- No specific oatmeal flavor, but lots of body. Light brown head. The
- only problem I had was that after about 3 months in the bottle it
- developed a distinct off flavor. Could be from the ice, or maybe it
- got oxygenated during bottling.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 2-3 weeks
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 45
-
-
-
-
- Mackeson's Stout
-
- Author: Marty Albini (hplabs!hpsd139!martya)
- Digest: September 1, 1989; Issue #244
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 pounds pale malt
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound roast black malt
- 1 pound soft brown sugar
- 1-3/4 ounce Fuggles hops
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Treat the water with 1/4 ounce of magnesium sulfate and 1 ounce of
- common salt. Crush all grains and mash in 2 gallons of water at 165
- degrees for 2 hours. Sparge with 2 gallons of 170 degree water. A
- few drops of caramel may be added at this stage if proper color has
- not been sufficiently achieved. Boil 1-1/2 hours with hops and sugar.
- Bring to 5 gallons, pitch yeast when at correct temperature. This
- recipe can be brewed at an O.G. of 1.045 by adding 1/4 pound of dark
- extract. May also add 1/4 pound of lactose in boil to provide a
- slightly higher gravity and a sweeter palate.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe is based on one presented by Bob Pritchard in his book All
- About Beer. He also advocates adding saccharine. In digest #245,
- Doug Roberts said that he made this beer and did not like the results.
- He said, "I will never again make a batch with brown sugar as an in-
- gredient (a little honey or molasses, perhaps, but not caramelized
- refined sugar). The recipe absolutely no resemblance to thick, rich,
- sweet Mackeson. It was a thin, cidery sorry imitation."
-
- Method: Full mash (infusion)
- Original Gravity: 1.040
- Final Gravity: 1.008-1.010
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 46
-
-
-
-
- Mackeson's Stout
-
- Author: Marty Albini (hplabs!hpsd139!martya)
- Digest: September 1, 1989, Issue #244
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4 pounds dark malt extract
- 2 pounds soft brown sugar
- 8 ounces gravy browning (caramel)
- 1-3/4 ounces Fuggles hops
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil hops in 20 pints of water for 1 hour. Strain and dissolve ex-
- tract, caramel and sugar. Boil for 15 minutes. Bring to 5 gallons,
- pitch yeast at correct temperature.
-
- As in the previous recipe, this can be brought to a gravity of 1.045
- by increasing the extract by 1/4 pound, and lactose may also be added.
- A few drops of caramel may be added at this stage if sufficient color
- has not been achieved. Saccharine can be added at bottling to increase
- apparent sweetness.
-
- Comments:
-
- I haven't tried either of these, and I'm not about to go adding
- saccharin to my beer, so you're on your own from here.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.040
- Final Gravity: 1.008-1.010
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 47
-
-
-
-
- Basic Stout
-
- Author: Marc San Soucie (mds@wang.wang.com)
- Digest: August 3, 1989, Issue #219
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6-8 pounds dark malt extract
- 1/2-1 pound roasted barley
- 1/2-1 pound black patent malt
- 3-4 ounces bittering hops (e.g., Bullion)
- small amount aromatic hops (optional)
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- To these skeleton ingredients I add other adjuncts, or remove things
- if the wind blows from the south. A nice beer is made by using only
- dark malt and black patent malt. A good strong bittering hops is key;
- Bullion is lovely, as are Nugget or Chinook.
-
- There are no appreciable differences between making stouts and other
- ales, save the larger quantities of grain. Beware of 9-pound batches
- as these can blow the lids off fermenters.
-
- Comments:
-
- There are scads of other additives that can lobbed into a stout with-
- out damaging it. Almost anything works when making stout, but match-
- ing your own taste preference is a matter of experimentation. Be pre-
- pared though to give up drinking commercial bottled stouts, because
- frankly, nothing can match the taste of homemade.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 48
-
-
-
-
- Crying Over Spilt Stout
-
- Author: Darryl Richman (darryl@ism.isc.com)
- Digest: August 4, 1989, Issue #220
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 22 pounds Klages 2-row malt
- 2 pounds roasted barley
- 2 pounds flaked barley
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 4-5 ounces high alpha hops
- (e.g., 4-1/4 ounce of 10% alpha Eroica)
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe makes 15 gallons. Give the beer a lot of temporary hard-
- ness (e.g., lots of
- carbonate).
-
- Comments:
-
- I would not leave flaked barley out of a stout. This is what gives
- Guinness its creamy white head and rounds out the body. This beer
- will have a rich creamy body with a balanced bitterness. It is very
- dark, but not opaque. It makes a great substitute for your morning
- coffee. The name refers to a huge tragedy. I was filling carboys and
- rocking them to knock down the head. I must have rolled one over a
- pebble because there came a distinct click noise and beer poured
- everywhere.
-
- Method: Full mash (infusion)
- Original Gravity: 1.048
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 49
-
-
-
-
- David Smith's Porter
-
- Author: David Smith, posted by Russ Pencin (parcplace!pencin@Sun.COM)
- Digest: August 9, 1989, Issue #223
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds John Bull dark extract
- 3.6 pounds light Australian dry malt
- 1 pound black patent malt (coarsely crushed)
- 2 ounces Cascade hops
- 1/2 ounce Tettnanger hops
- 1 ounce Tettnanger hops (finish)
- 1 pack Edme ale yeast
- 3/4 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Add crushed black patent malt to 1-1/2 gallons cold water. Bring to
- boil. (This recipe was made by boiling malt for 10 minutes, however,
- conventional wisdom is to avoid boiling whole grains). Strain out
- malt. Add extract and dry malt and Cascade and 1/2 ounce Tettnanger
- hops. Boil 60 minutes. Add finishing hops and boil 1 minute. Remove
- from heat and steep 1-2 minutes. Sparge into 3-1/2 gallons cold
- water. Cool and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe was modified from Papazian's "Sparrow Hawk Porter" and won
- first place at the Santa Clara County Fair.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.056 at 60 degrees
- Final Gravity: 1.024
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 50
-
-
-
-
- Mackeson Triple Stout Clone
-
- Author: Doug Roberts (dzzr@lanl.gov)
- Digest: August 15, 1989, Issue #229
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds Australian light syrup
- 1 pound chocolate malt, cracked
- 1-1/2 pound black patent malt
- 12 ounces crystal malt, cracked
- 12 ounces lactose
- 2 ounces Kent Goldings leaf hops
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon citric acid
- 2-1/2 teaspoons yeast nutrient
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Bring syrup and enough water to make 3 gallons to boil. Add crystal
- malt. Boil 10 minutes. Add hops. Boil 5 minutes. Turn off heat.
- Add chocolate and black patent malt in grain bag. Steep 10 minutes.
- Sparge grain bag with 2 gallons boiling water. Add lactose. Pitch
- yeast and ferment. When bottling, prime with malt extract.
-
- Comments:
-
- It took me three tries, but I finally got a batch that was closer to
- the original Mackeson sweet stout than I could have hoped for. It was
- wonderful! After aging about three months, it was as wonderfully
- smooth, dark, and sweet as the real Mackeson. Maybe better.
-
- Ingredients were obtained from Great Fermentations.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.057
- Final Gravity: 1.022
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: 5-6 weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 51
-
-
-
-
- Oatmeal Stout
-
- Author: Patrick Stirling (pms@Corp.Sun.COM)
- Digest: September 11, 1990, Issue #493
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 8 pounds British amber extract
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound roasted barley
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 1 pound steel cut oats
- 2 ounces Eroica hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Fuggles hops (finish)
- Whitbread ale yeast
- 1/2 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Crack grains using a rolling pin. Add grain and oats to 2 gallons
- cold water. Bring to boil. Strain out grains. Add extract and
- Eroica hops. Boil about 1 hour. Add Fuggles and boil an additional 2
- minutes. Steep 15 minutes. Sparge through sieve over ice. Mix.
- Rack to 7-gallon carboy and pitch yeast. Bottle when fermentation is
- complete (about 1 week).
-
- Comments:
-
- This was one of my best beers yet. Black, smooth and creamy. The
- oatmeal doesn't add a very pronounced flavor; I think it rather con-
- tributes to the creaminess and smoothness, which is becoming more
- pronounced as the beer ages. It has a fairly dark brown head, presum-
- ably from roasted barley---creamy with small bubbles.
-
- This recipe was derived from several posted by Jay H. in digest #459.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.062
- Final Gravity: 1.015
- Primary Ferment: 1 week
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 52
-
-
-
-
- Halloween Stout
-
- Author: Alex Jenkins (atj@mirror.tmc.com)
- Digest: January 24, 1989, Issue #57
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 pounds pale malt
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 1 pound chocolate malt
- 3.3 pounds John Bull unhopped dark malt extract
- 1 ounce Clusters hops pellets
- 1 ounce Hallertauer leaf hops
- 1 tablespoon Irish moss
- 1/2 ounce Willamette hops pellets
- 2 packs Red Star ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash malts in 2-1/2 gallons of 170 degree water; 154 degrees, ph 5.2,
- maintain at 140-150 degrees for 90 minutes. (Ending pH was 4.8.).
- Sparge and bring to boil. Add dark extract. Add Clusters and
- Hallertauer hops 20 minutes into boil. Add Irish moss after another
- 10 minutes. Add Willamette hops in last 15 minutes. Cool wort and
- add to carboy. Pitch yeast. Set carboy in cool basement with blow
- tube. On second day, replace blow tube with airlock. Bottled after
- 29 days.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: 1.044
- Final Gravity: 1.014
- Primary Ferment: 29 days
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 53
-
-
-
-
- Cream of Oats Stout
-
- Author: Glenn Colon-Bonet (gcb@hpfigcb.hp.com)
- Digest: May 4, 1990, Issue #412
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds Klages 2-row pale malt
- 1/2 pound Dextrin malt
- 1-1/8 pound rolled oats
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 1/4 pound roasted barley
- 1 ounce Clusters boiling hops (7.4 alpha)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops
- 10 ounces lactose
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- Wyeast #1007: German ale
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash in 3 quarts cold water. Raise temperature to 153 degrees and
- hold until iodine test indicates complete conversion. Transfer to
- lauter tun and sparge to yield 7 gallons. Boil 1 hour, adding boiling
- hops. Add finishing hops and Irish moss in last 10 minutes. Sparge,
- cool and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- Very smooth, silky mouth feel. Great flavor, nice sweetness with mild
- roasted malt flavors. Somewhat thin for style. Will use ale malt
- next time. Could also use more dextrin and pale malt and possibly
- mash at higher temperature. Overall, a very nice beer!
-
- Method: Full mash (infusion)
- Original Gravity: 1.040
- Final Gravity: 1.015
- Primary Ferment: 7 days
- Secondary Ferment: 3 weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 54
-
-
-
-
- Russian Empirical Stout
-
- Author: Rob Bradley (bradley@dehn.math.nwu.edu)
- Digest: May 15, 1990, Issue #417
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5-1/2 pounds 2-row pale malt
- 1 pound caramel malt
- 1/4 pound chocolate malt
- 1/4 pound black patent malt
- 4-1/2 pounds diastatic malt extract
- 2-1/2 ounces Fuggles hops
- 1/4 ounce Chinook hops
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- Leigh Williams Yeast
- Pasteur champagne yeast
- 1/4 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- This will yield about 3-1/2 gallons at a density of 1106. Mash grains
- using infusion method for about 1 hour. Boil two hours with all hops
- added---that's right, no finishing hops. Cool and pitch Williams
- yeast. Ferment for 4 days then rack to glass jugs. Rack again on
- 24th day. Add champagne yeast. Let ferment another 4 months.
- Bottle.
-
- Comments:
-
- After two years this beer showed a little oxidation, but by and large
- it was till in excellent shape. Viscous and black with light carbona-
- tion and a fine-beaded medium-brown head, it still had good balance,
- although the hop bitterness had faded with time to give predominance
- to the dark malts. It was bittersweet and almost unbelievably long in
- the finish.
-
- Method: Full mash (infusion)
- Original Gravity: 1.106
- Final Gravity: 1.032
- Primary Ferment: 4 days
- Secondary Ferment: 24 days + 4 months
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 55
-
-
-
-
- Oatmeal Wheat Stout
-
- Author: Don Wegeng (Wegeng.Henr@Xerox.COM)
- Digest: March 10, 1989, Issue #95
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds Edme Irish stout extract
- 3.3 pounds Edme light beer extract
- 3 pounds pale, 2-row malt
- 2 pounds crystal malt
- 1 pound wheat malt
- 1 pound old-fashion oatmeal
- 2-1/2 cups roasted barley
- 4 cups black patent malt
- 1 pack Edme ale yeast
- 1 stick brewers licorice
- 2 ounces Hallertauer leaf hops
- 1 ounce Tettnanger leaf hops
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1 teaspoon diastatic enzyme powder
-
- Procedure:
-
- Crush pale and crystal malt. Loosely crush black patent malt. Place
- oatmeal in cheesecloth. Mash all except 2 cups of the black patent
- malt for 1-1/2 hours. Add diastatic enzyme. Sparge and begin boil.
- Add extracts and licorice. After 15 minutes of boil, add 1 ounce
- Tettnanger and continue boil. After another 15 minutes, add 1/2 ounce
- Hallertauer. During last 15 minutes, add Irish moss and 2 cups black
- patent malt. During last 2 minutes of boil add 1 ounce Hallertauer.
- Cool rapidly and pitch yeast. Ferment in 5-gallon carboy with blow
- tube attached. Proceed with normal single-stage fermentation.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe was developed by Kenneth Kramer who published it in the
- June 1986 issue of All About Beer magazine. I won't comment on the
- choice of hops.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.078
- Final Gravity: 1.032
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 56
-
-
-
-
- Mega Stout
-
- Author: rogerl@Think.COM
- Digest: March 15, 1989, Issue #101
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2 cans Munton & Fison stout kit
- 3 pounds Munton & Fison extra dark dry malt extract
- 2 cups chocolate malt
- 2 cups black patent malt
- 2 cups roasted barley
- 3 ounces Fuggles hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- ale yeast
- 1/4 teaspoon Irish moss
- 3/4 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep whole grains in 6 cups of water and bring to boil. Remove
- grains at boil. Add extract and boiling hops. Boil 1 hour. Add Irish
- moss in last 15 minutes. After boil, add Cascade hops and steep 15
- minutes. Cool and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe was developed by Doug Hinderks, president of the Northern
- Ale Stars Homebrewers Guild. The recipe was used as the basis for
- "Ursa Stout," which follows. Ursa differs in the addition of pale,
- crystal, and dextrin malts in place of some of the dry extract.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.071
- Final Gravity: 1.020
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 57
-
-
-
-
- Ursa Major Stout
-
- Author: rogerl@Think.COM
- Digest: March 15, 1989, Issue #101
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2 cans Munton & Fison stout kit
- 2 pounds Munton & Fison light dry malt extract
- 1 pound crushed pale malt
- 1 pound crushed crystal malt
- 1/2 pound dextrin malt
- 2 cups chocolate malt
- 2 cups black patent malt
- 2 cups roast barley
- 2 ounces Fuggles hops pellets (boil)
- 1-2 ounce Willamette leaf hops (finish)
- 2 packs M&F stout yeast
- 1/4 teaspoon Irish moss
- 3/4 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash grains in 1-2 gallons of water. Sparge with enough water to end
- with 2-3 gallons in pot. Bring to boil. Stir in extract and bring to
- boil. Add boiling hops. Boil 40 minutes. Add Irish moss in last 15
- minutes. At end of boil, add aromatic hops and steep 15 minutes.
- Sparge into primary with enough water to make 6 gallons. Cool and
- pitch yeast. Rack to secondary when initial blow off subsides. Prime
- and bottle about a month later.
-
- Comments:
-
- This brew is so dark I think the Irish moss may be superfluous. This
- was the most active brew I've had in a while. Expect to use some sort
- of blow off method for primary and then rack to secondary with an
- airlock. Very black! Thick, but not as much as Guinness. Well
- rounded flavor and smooth with almost no bite. Very dark head. Maybe
- using less roast barley and a bit more black patent would lighten the
- head and keep the body from suffering. Everybody who tasted it really
- like it. I do believe I've found my house stout.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.058
- Final Gravity: 1.016
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 58
-
-
-
-
- Porter
-
- Author: Gary Benson (inc@tc.fluke.COM)
- Digest: April 11, 1989, Issue #124
-
- Ingredients:
- 1 can Munton & Fison dark hopped extract
- 1/2 can Edme bitters kit
- 1 stick brewers licorice
- 1/2 pound toasted barley
- 1 pound flaked barley
- 2 ounces Cascade hops pellets
- 1 ounce Northern Brewer hops pellets
- Edme ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Make toasted barley into a tea. Bring flaked barley to boil. Sparge
- with kitchen strainer and boiling water. Boil extracts and Cascade
- hops. Add Northern Brewer. Cool and Pitch.
-
- Comments:
-
- This makes what I consider to be an excellent porter. Fermentation
- seemed to take off and I bottled within 7 days of brewing. Fermenta-
- tion took place at 74 degrees.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.045
- Final Gravity: 1.005
- Primary Ferment: 2 days
- Secondary Ferment: 5 days
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 59
-
-
-
-
- Dextrinous Porter
-
- Author: Peter Klausler (pmk@bedlam.cray.com)
- Digest: June 16, 1989, Issue #177
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 8 pounds Munton & Fison 2-row pale malt
- 1-1/2 pounds crystal malt
- 1/4 pound chocolate malt
- 1/4 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound flaked barley
- 1 ounce Willamette hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash grains. Add boiling hops and boil 90 minutes. Dry hop with 1/2
- ounce Cascade.
-
- Comments:
-
- My mash temp was too high, as I misjudged the quantity of strike
- liquor and the mash spent a lot of time in the 160-170 degree range
- before I brought it down to 154 degrees. Conversion was good (1.048
- for 5 gallons), but now after fermentation slowed to 1 bubble every 2
- minutes, the gravity is 1.024. I suspect there's nothing I can do to
- turn this sweet porter into the dry porter I intended so my question
- is, "Is there some style I can claim to have intended in the first
- place?" I guess I need some level of plausible brewability.
-
- Method: Full mash (infusion)
- Original Gravity: 1.048
- Final Gravity: 1.024
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 60
-
-
-
-
- Crankcase Stout: An Experiment in Extravagance
-
- Marc San Soucie (hplabs!decvax!wang!mds)
- June 16, 1989, Issue #178
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 pound crushed crystal malt
- 1 pound crushed roasted barley
- 1-1/2 pounds crushed black patent malt
- 9 pounds Munton & Fison dark dry malt extract
- 1 can John Bull dark hopped malt extract
- 2 inches brewers licorice
- 2 ounces Nugget leaf hops
- 2 ounces Galena leaf hops
- 1 ounce Cascade hops
- 2 packs Doric ale yeast
- 1 ounce amylase enzyme
-
- Procedure:
-
- Put grains into two gallons water and boil. When pot reaches boil,
- remove grains. Add dry extract and stir. Add hopped extract and
- licorice. Add Nugget and Galena hops. Boil 70 minutes. This was a
- big thick mess and needs a big pot---mine boiled over. Add Cascade
- for finishing. Cool and pitch yeast and amylase. Put in a big
- fermenter with a blow tube---my batch blew the cover creating a
- marvelous mess all over the wall. Eventually rack to secondary and
- ferment a long time (at least 3 weeks).
-
- Comments:
-
- Intimidating. Heavy, strong, thick. Not really drinkable after 4
- months. Interesting, but not completely enjoyable. Too much of too
- many good things.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: 3 weeks +
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 61
-
-
-
-
- Tina Marie Porter
-
- Author: Doug Roberts (roberts%studguppy@lanl.gov)
- Digest: March 15, 1990, Issue #378
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 8 pounds Klages 2-row malt
- 1 pound Munich malt
- 1/2 pound crystal malt (90L)
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound roasted barley
- 1/2 ounce Northern Brewer hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- 14 grams Whitbread ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- The mash was done based on Papazian's temperature-controlled method.
- The boiling hops used were Northern Brewer and Cascade, but other hops
- can be used, this recipe uses 10.75 AAUs. The finishing hops are
- added after the boil and steep while cooling with an immersion chil-
- ler. The Irish moss is added in the last 20 minutes of the boil. The
- yeast is rehydrated in 1/2 cup of 100 degree water.
-
- Comments:
-
- This was a marvelous bitter-sweet velvet black porter.
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 62
-
-
-
-
- Baer's Stout
-
- Author: Michael Eldridge (dredge@hitchcock.Stanford.EDU)
- Digest: March 20, 1990, Issue #380
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1/4 pound flaked barley
- 1/4 pound medium crystal malt
- 6 pounds dark Australian malt extract
- 1/2 pound dark Australian dry malt
- 1/4 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 cup molasses
- 2 ounces Cascade hops (boil)
- 2/3 ounce Northern Brewer hops (finish)
- Wyeast British ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep flaked barley and crystal malt for 50 minutes at 153 degrees.
- Strain and boil 90 minutes. Add 1/3 of boiling hops after 30 minutes.
- Add black patent and molasses at 45 minutes. After 60 minutes add 1/3
- of boiling hops. At end of boil add remaining hops. Steep. Strain,
- cool, and ferment.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is based on one of the excellent recipes from Dave Baer (from
- this digest). This one came out great! Apologies to Dave for what we
- may have done to the original.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.051
- Final Gravity: 1.018
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 63
-
-
-
-
- Black Cat Stout #1
-
- Author: Mark Stevens (stevens@stsci.edu)
- Digest: February 1, 1990, Issue #349
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds Munton & Fison dark extract syrup
- 1 pound Munton & Fison dark dry extract
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 3/4 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound roasted barley
- 1/2 cup dark molasses
- 3/4 ounce Willamette hops (boil)
- 3/4 ounce Cascade hops (boil)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1/2 cup French roast coffee
- 2 packs Edme ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Brew a pot of coffee with 1/2 cup of French roast coffee. Steep
- specialty grains in water as it boils. Remove grains. Boil malts,
- hops, and vanilla 60 minutes. Strain wort into fermenter. Pour in pot
- of coffee. Add ice water to make 5 gallons. Pitch yeast. Rack to
- secondary after 3 days. Bottle 23 days later.
-
- Comments:
-
- This stout turned out pretty tasty and the coffee flavor seems to come
- through more in the aftertaste with the predominant flavor being the
- dark malts. I should probably have let it ferment in the secondary a
- bit longer or not used anything for priming because I got a few gush-
- ers after a couple months---but by then, most of the beer was gone
- anyway.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.069
- Final Gravity: 1.028
- Primary Ferment: 3 days
- Secondary Ferment: 23 days
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 64
-
-
-
-
- Colorado Crankcase Stout
-
- Tom Hotchkiss (trh@hpestrh.hp.com)
- February 6, 1989, Issue #352
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds Edme SFX dark malt extract
- 3.3 pounds John Bull dark malt extract
- 2 pounds amber dry malt extract
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 1 pound roasted barley
- 1 pound chocolate malt
- 3/4 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 stick brewers licorice
- 2 ounces Brewers Gold hops
- 2 ounces Fuggles hops
- 1/2 pound French roast coffee beans
- Wyeast #1028: British ale
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep grains in water while heating. Remove grains just before boil-
- ing. During boil, add licorice and extract. Add 1 ounce of Brewer's
- Gold for 60 minutes, 1 ounce for 45 minutes, and 1 ounce of Fuggles
- for 30 minutes. Cool wort and pitch yeast. Add unground coffee beans
- and remaining ounce of Fuggles. The next day skim off all crud,
- including coffee beans and hops. One day later, rack to secondary.
- Ferment three weeks and bottle.
-
- Comments:
-
- Wyeast #1028 does not seem to have high attenuation, causing high
- final gravity. After 1 month in bottles, the beer has low carbonation
- levels. I like it this way! The beer feels thick and sweet. If you
- want a good sweet stout, like Mackeson, this recipe with Wyeast #1028
- is a good way to go. This stuff is black! When you pour a bottle, it
- sucks all the light out of the room...you have to drink it in the
- dark. Amazingly, there isn't much hops aroma and taste, but with so
- many other flavors and aromas, you don't miss it.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.065
- Final Gravity: 1.026
- Primary Ferment: 2 days
- Secondary Ferment: 3 weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 65
-
-
-
-
- Martin's Porter
-
- Author: Martin Lodahl (pbmoss!mal@hplabs.HP.com)
- Digest: December 4, 1989, Issue #315
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3 pounds 2-row pale lager malt
- 10 ounces black patent malt
- 8 ounces wheat malt
- 4 pounds Scottish light malt extract
- 12 AAUs Northern Brewer hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Fuggles hops (finish)
- 3 teaspoons yeast nutrient
- Edme ale yeast
- 1 teaspoon gelatin finings
- 1/2 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Mash-in 3 minutes in 6 quarts of water at 122 degree (strike heat 126
- degree). Adjust pH to 5.0-5.5. Protein rest 30 minutes at 131
- degrees. Starch conversion 60 minutes at 150-141 degrees (longer is
- better). Mash out 5 minutes at 168 degrees. sparge with 2 gallons of
- water at 168-160 degrees. Boil 60 minutes. Add extract, yeast nutri-
- ent and bittering hops at start of boil. Add finishing hops 10 min-
- utes before boil ends. Force cool and bring volume to 5 gallons.
- Pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- If this beer doesn't have enough body, you might try substituting
- unmalted barley for the wheat malt and extend starch conversion rest
- to 2 hours. Bitterness can be reduced by cutting back bittering hops
- to 8 AAUs or so.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 66
-
-
-
-
- Double Stout
-
- Author: Chip Hitchcock (cjh@ileaf.com)
- Digest: October 18, 1990, Issue #520
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 1/4 pound roasted barley
- 3.3 pounds Mountmellick stout kit
- 1/2 pound amber dry malt
- 1/2 teaspoon gypsum
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1/4 ounce Fuggles hops plug
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 2-1/2 gallon recipe. Steep the grains 30 minutes in 1 quart
- of 150 degree water. Strain out grains and bring liquid up to 3
- quarts. Add stout kit, amber malt, gypsum and boil 45 minutes. After
- 15 minutes of boiling, add Irish moss. After removing from heat,
- steep Fuggles hops pellets for 4 minutes. Strain into ice water and
- pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe is based on the Double Stout recipe that appeared in
- Zymurgy magazine, but the quantities have been adjusted to make a half
- batch.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment:N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 67
-
-
-
-
- Chocolate Point Porter
-
- Author: Doug Roberts (roberts%studguppy@lanl.gov)
- Digest: October 2, 1989, Issue #269
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds unhopped extract syrup
- 1 pound chocolate malt, not cracked
- 1/2 pound black patent malt, not cracked
- 1/2 pound crystal malt (90 degrees L.)
- 1/2 pound Sumatra decaf coffee
- 1-1/2 ounce Cascade hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Place chocolate, patent, and crystal malts in about 2 gallons of water
- and bring to almost boil, Sparge into boiling pot. Add 2 more gallons
- of water. Bring to boil and add bittering hops. 30 minutes into the
- boil, add 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss. Boil one more hour. Add finishing
- hops in last 2 minutes of boil. Pour into fermenter and add coffee.
- Pitch yeast.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 68
-
-
-
-
- Partial Mash Porter
-
- Author: Martin Lodahl (mal@pbmoss.pacbell.com)
- Digest: October 10, 1989, Issue #274
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3 pounds 2-row pale lager malt
- 10 ounces black patent malt
- 6 ounces crystal malt
- 4 pounds Australian dark extract
- 11 AAUs Northern Brewer hops
- Doric yeast
- 1/2 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash-in (6 quarts water) at 131-122 degrees, stir 3 minutes. Adjust pH
- to 5.0-5.5 (using calcium carbonate or gypsum). Protein rest 131-120
- degrees for 30 minutes. Starch conversion 155 degrees for 60 minutes.
- Mash out at 168 degrees for 5 minutes. Sparge with 2 gallons of 168-
- 160 degree water. Bring liquid to boil and add extract and hops. Boil
- 60 minutes.
-
- Comments:
-
- The result is sweet, but very tasty. My next batch of porter will be
- somewhat drier, tending toward stout. Changes will include a less
- sweet extract (Scottish light), dropping the crystal malt altogether,
- bumping the bittering hops up a point, adding an ounce of Fuggles 10
- minutes before the end of the boil for finish, and going to Edme
- yeast, which I believe to be more attenuative. I'm also toying with
- the idea of adding 8 ounces of wheat malt to improve the head, which
- is the only real defect this beer seems to have.
-
- Method: Partial Mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 69
-
-
-
-
- Stout
-
- Author: Allen Hainer (ajhainer@violet.waterloo.edu)
- Digest: October 18, 1989, Issue #281
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 8.8 pounds unhopped dark malt extract
- 1 pound roasted barley
- 1 pound wheat malt
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 4 ounces Bullion hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- The bullion hops are added 30 minutes into the bullion. I used pel-
- letized hops and there was a huge amount of sediment when I racked it-
- --not sediment in the normal sense---it was mostly beer with hops
- floating in it, but it was too thick to go through the siphon.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is better than any stout
- I have ever tasted. It is based on the stout recipe posted by Marc
- San Soucie in Digest #219.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.075
- Final Gravity: 1.035
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 70
-
-
-
-
- All Grain Porter
-
- Author: Doug Roberts (roberts%studguppy@lanl.gov)
- Digest: November 4, 1989, Issue #296
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 8 pounds American 6-row (Klages) malt
- 1 pound Munich malt
- 1/2 pound crystal malt (90L)
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 1/2 pound roasted barley
- 1 teaspoon calcium carbonate
- 1 ounce Northern Brewer hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- Whitbread ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Use Papazian's temperature-controlled mash procedure. Sparge and
- boil.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipes is based on Papazian's Silver Dollar Porter. I suspect
- the difference in quality between this batch and an extract batch is
- going to be the difference between fresh-brewed coffee and instant.
- The wort had a much better hot and cold break than I've ever exper-
- ienced using extracts, and it tasted better too.
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: 1.051
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 71
-
-
-
-
- Sweet Darkness
-
- Author: Marty Albini (martya@hp-sdd@hplabs.csnet)
- Digest: November 8, 1989, Issue #298
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds Australian light syrup
- 1 pound chocolate malt, cracked
- 1-1/2 pounds black patent, uncracked
- 12 ounces crystal malt, cracked
- 12 ounces lactose
- 2 ounces Kent Goldings hops (whole leaf)
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon citric acid
- 2-1/2 teaspoons yeast nutrient
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Bring the wort to boil (water and syrup to make 3 gallons),then add
- crystal. Boil 10 minutes, then add hops. Boil 5 minutes. Turn off
- heat and add chocolate and black patent malt in a grain bag. Steep
- about 10 minutes. Sparge grain bag with about 2 gallons of boiling
- water. Add lactose. Chill and pitch. When fermented, try priming with
- 3/4 cup of light dry malt extract.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is based on Doug Roberts' Mackeson Triple clone. This will be
- lighter than the real Mackeson's with a lighter head. Very similar
- aromas and head retention. Overall a resounding success. One or two
- things I'll do different next time: Reduce black patent malt to 1/2
- cup (crushed), add a bit of dextrin to increase body, and maybe add a
- touch of roasted barley. I recommend this to anyone who likes their
- coffee strong, with cream and sugar.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.057
- Final Gravity: 1.022
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 72
-
-
-
-
- Broglio's Quaker Stout
-
- Author: Jim Broglio (microsoft!jamesb@uunet.uu.net)
- Digest: December 29, 1989, Issue #334
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds dry amber extract
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound roasted barley
- 1 pound Quaker oats
- 1 ounce Eroica hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Kent Goldings hops(finish)
- 2 packs Edme ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- In two gallons of cold water, add crystal, barley, and oatmeal. Steep
- until water comes to boil. Sparge with about 1 gallon of hot water.
- Add dry extract. Bring to boil. Add Eroica hops. Boil 45 minutes.
- In last 5 minutes of boil, add Kent Goldings hops. Cool to about 75
- degrees. Transfer to primary and pitch yeast. Have a homebrew and
- wait.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is very lightly carbonated, but that I can live with. Could use
- more hops. Smooth aftertaste. Overall, I give it a thumbs up.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 73
-
-
-
-
- Original Oatmeal Stout
-
- Author: Jay Hersch (75140.350@compuserve.com)
- Digest: July 14, 1990, Issue #459
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds John Bull dark extract
- 1-1/2 pounds plain dark extract
- 2 ounces Bullion hops (boil)
- 1/2 pound steel cut oats
- 7 grams Muntona ale yeast
- Irish moss
- water crystals
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is the first of a series of experiments in brewing oatmeal
- stouts. It is an extract brew, with any specialty grains (not in this
- particular recipe) being added in the standard stovetop method and
- removed at boil. When grains are used, they are cracked with a rolling
- pin and boiled for 30 minutes before straining.
-
- Comments:
-
- These recipes rank among my best beers. This one probably had the
- most noticeable oat flavor of all the variations due to the balance
- between the amount of malt and oats. It had a nice deep dark head,
- opaque color and smooth creamy flavor. I'd probably use an Irish
- liquid ale yeast or Whitbread if I did this again.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.042
- Final Gravity: 1.021
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 74
-
-
-
-
- Second Try
-
- Author:Jay Hersh (75140.350@compuserve.com)
- Digest: July 14, 1990, Issue #459
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds John Bull plain light extract
- 1-1/2 pounds plain dark dry extract
- 3/4 pound black patent malt
- 1/4 pound roasted barley
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 1/2 pound steel cut oats
- 7 grams Muntona ale yeast
- 1/2 ounce Fuggles hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Hallertauer hops (boil)
- 1-1/2 ounces Cascade hops (finish)
- Irish moss
- water crystals
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is the second of a series of experiments in brewing oatmeal
- stouts. It is an extract brew, with specialty grains being added
- using the standard stovetop method and removed at boil. When grains
- are used, they are cracked with a rolling pin and boiled for 30 min-
- utes before straining. The finishing hops are added in the last 5
- minutes of the boil.
-
- Comments:
-
- The addition of grains made the oatmeal less noticeable. Color and
- hop balance were good again. Irish ale yeast could yield some nice
- results and I think the steel cut oats need to be bumped up to 1 pound
- to bring them to the fore.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.050
- Final Gravity: 1.022
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 75
-
-
-
-
- Not So Oatmeal
-
- Author: Jay Hersch (75140.350@compuserve.com)
- Digest: July 14, 1990, Issue #459
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds Munton & Fison plain light extract
- 4 pounds Alexanders pale unhopped extract
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 1/4 pound roasted barley
- 1/2 pound crystal or cara-pils malt
- 1/2 pound steel cut oats
- 1 ounce Hallertauer hops (boil)
- 3/4 ounce Fuggles hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (dry)
- 14 grams Muntona ale yeast
- Irish moss
- water crystals
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is the third of a series of experiments in brewing oatmeal
- stouts. It is an extract brew, with specialty grains being added in
- the standard stovetop method and removed at boil. Grains are cracked
- with a rolling pin and boiled for 30 minutes before straining. The
- finishing hops are added 5 minutes before the end of the boil. The
- dry hopping is done after 4 days in the primary.
-
- Comments:
-
- This turned out real fruity, probably because of the Alexander's. Dry
- hopping also helped, again the amount of steel oats to other grains
- was too low. To get opaqueness it was necessary to use at least 1-2
- pounds of dark malt extract; because I didn't do that, this ware more
- of a brown ale in color and body.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: 1.018
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 76
-
-
-
-
- Most Recent Oatmeal Stout
-
- Author: Jay Hersch (75140.350@compuserve.com)
- Digest: July 14, 1990, Issue #459
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds Munton & Fison light unhopped extract
- 3.3 pounds Munton & Fison dark unhopped extract
- 1/2 pound cara-pils malt
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound roasted barley
- 3/4 pound steel cut oats
- 1/2 pound malt-dextrin
- 2 ounces Sticklbrackt hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Bullion hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Cascade hops (finish)
- 1 ounce Cascade hops (dry)
- 14 grams Whitbread ale yeast
- Irish moss/water crystals
-
- Procedure:
-
- Last in the series of experiments in brewing oatmeal stouts. It is an
- extract brew, with specialty grains being added in the standard stove-
- top method and removed at boil. Grains are cracked with a rolling pin
- and boiled for 30 minutes before straining. The Sticklbrackt are
- added in 1/2 ounce batches at 20 minute intervals, the Bullion 1/2
- ounce at a time in between the Sticklbrackt. The finishing hops are
- added 5 minutes before the end of the boil. The dry hopping is done
- in the primary.
-
- Comments:
-
- Darker and more astringent than the other recipes, also more boldly
- hopped but still well-balanced due to the higher gravity. A little
- like Xingu or Mackesons with its residual sweetness.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: 1.030
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 77
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 5: BOCK, DARK, AND AMBER LAGER
-
-
-
- Dark lagers must be seldom brewed by Homebrew Digest subscribers if
- posted recipes are any indication of brewing frequency. Still, dark
- lagers and bocks are important styles with a long brewing heritage,
- especially in Germany.
-
- This chapter includes not only bock, but the dark beers of Dortmund,
- Munich, and even amber beers such as Vienna or Maerzenbier. Lager
- beer is typically brewed from a 6-row malt and hopped with some of the
- more delicate hops, such as Hallertauer or Saaz. Darker colors come
- from specialty malts such as crystal, black patent, or chocolate.
- Starting gravities are typically in the 1.050 range with bocks in the
- 1.060 range. (Dopplebocks are covered in another chapter.) Fermenta-
- tion typically takes place at lower temperatures, around 40 degrees.
-
- For more information about dark lagers, see Fred Eckhardt's The Essen-
- tials of Beer Style, (available from the Association of Brewers), or
- one of the general beer texts such as Michael Jackson's World Guide to
- Beer.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 78
-
-
-
-
- Maerzen Beer
-
- Author: Florian Bell (florianb%tekred.cna.tek.com@RELAY.CS.NET)
- Digest: May 24, 1990, Issue #424
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4 pounds pale malt
- 3 pounds light dry extract
- 1/2 pound crystal malt (40L)
- 2 ounces chocolate malt
- 1/2 pound toasted malt
- 1/2 pound Munich malt
- 2 ounces dextrin malt
- 2-1/2 ounces Tettnanger hops (4.2 alpha)
- 1/2 ounce Cascade hops (5.0 alpha)
- 3 teaspoons gypsum
- Vierka dry lager yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Make up yeast starter 2 days before brewing. Grind all grains togeth-
- er, dough-in with 5 cups warm water. Use 3 quarts water at 130 de-
- grees to bring up to protein rest temperature of 122 degrees. Set for
- 30 minutes. Add 8 pints of boiling water and heat to 154 degrees.
- Set for at least 30 minutes. Bring to 170 degrees for 5 minutes for
- mash out. Sparge with 2 gallons water.
-
- Add dry extract, bring to boil. Boil 15 minutes and add one ounce of
- Tettnanger. Boil one hour. Add 1 ounce of Tettnanger at 30 minutes.
- Add 1/2 ounce of Tettnanger and 1/2 ounce of Cascade at 5 minutes
- (with Irish moss if desired). Strain and chill. Rack off trub.
- Pitch yeast.
-
- Ferment at 68 degrees for 3 days. Rack to secondary and lager 18 days
- at 42 degrees. After 18 days keg and lager an additional 17 days.
-
- Comments:
-
- This brew was dark brown-red with a distinct nutty flavor coming from
- the toasted malt barley. A good head, little chill haze.
-
- Method: Partial mash (decoction)
- Original Gravity: 1.056
- Final Gravity: 1.020
- Primary Ferment: 3 days
- Secondary Ferment:15 days
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 79
-
-
-
-
- Helles Belles Maibock
-
- Author: Chuck Cox (bose!synchro!chuck@uunet.UU.NET)
- Digest: December 18, 1990, Issue #556
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 18 pounds pale unhopped extract
- 2 pounds crystal malt
- 1 pound lager malt
- 1 pound toasted malt
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 14 HBUs Hallertauer hops (boil)
- 14 HBUs Tettnanger hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops (finish)
- 1/2 ounce Tettnanger hops (finish)
- Anheuser-Busch yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 10-gallon partial mash recipe. Use standard procedures,
- brewing about 7 gallons of wort in a 10-gallon kettle, followed by a
- 7-gallon primary and 2 5-gallon secondaries. Then keg (or bottle).
- The toasted malt was done 5 minutes in a 350 degree oven. The yeast
- was cultured from bakers yeast.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 80
-
-
-
-
- Dos Equis
-
- Author: Len Reed (lbr%holos0@gatech.edu)
- Digest: May 8, 1990, Issue #414
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds 6-row malt (1.6L)
- 1.1 pound 2-row malt (1.2L)
- 1/3 pound Munich malt (9.7L)
- 1/4 pound crystal malt (80L)
- Hallertauer hops
- yeast
-
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 81
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 6: DOPPLEBOCK AND BARLEYWINE
-
-
-
- Dopplebock and barleywine are among the strongest beers brewed. Both
- are brewed to very high gravities, typically 1.100 or higher, and age
- several months before drinking. The difference between the two styles
- is that dopplebock is a lager whereas barleywine is an ale (although
- both may sometimes need a wine or champagne yeast to complete their
- fermentation).
-
- For more information about these heavy beers, see Fred Eckhardt's The
- Essentials of Beer Style, (available from the Association of Brewers),
- or one of the general beer texts such as Michael Jackson's World Guide
- to Beer. You may also want to look at the Russian Imperial stouts
- described in Chapter 4.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 82
-
-
-
-
- The Grommator
-
- Author: Jack Webb (jack.l.webb@office.wang.com)
- Digest: February 4, 1991, Issue #575
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1/2 pound pale malt
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- 9.9 pounds dark malt extract syrup
- 1 pound dry amber malt extract
- 3-1/2 ounces Saaz hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops (finish)
- lager yeast
- 3/4 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Roast pale malt in 325 degree oven for 15 minutes or until golden
- brown. Crack grains and add to 1-1/2 gallons cold water. Bring to
- boil. Before serious boil starts, remove grains. Add extract and
- Saaz hops. Boil 60 minutes. Add Hallertauer hops and boil 5 more
- minutes. Remove from heat. Cover and let hops steep 15 minutes.
- Strain into 3-1/2 gallons cold water. (Be sure to strain out as much
- stuff as possible.) Pitch yeast and ferment one week at about 65
- degrees, then rack to secondary. Secondary fermentation should last
- about 3 weeks at 45-50 degrees. Prime and bottle. Refrigerate
- bottles for about 1 month.
-
- Comments:
-
- This dopplebock was based on a recipe from Papazian's book. In making
- this beer, I used hops plugs for the first time. Wonderful stuff.
- They expand and give the appearance of fresh hops and they smell
- great! This batch turned out really well. Very dark and smooth,
- lightly carbonated, with a considerable alcoholic whammy. Great sip-
- pin' beer.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 1 week at 65 degrees
- Secondary Ferment: 3 weeks at 45-50 degrees
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 83
-
-
-
-
- Barleywine
-
- Author: Nick Thomas (nt@Eng.Sun.COM)
- Digest: January 16, 1991; Issue # 566
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 12 pounds dry pale malt extract
- 1/2 pound honey
- 1 pound dry light malt extract
- 1-1/2 pounds corn sugar
- 2 ounces Chinook boiling hops (13.2 alpha)
- 2 ounces Cascade boiling hops (5.5 alpha)
- 2 tsp. Irish moss
- 2 ounces Fuggles hops (finish)
- 2 tsp. Sparkeloid
- champagne yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil malt, boiling hops, and corn sugar in 1-1/2 gallons water for
- about 1 hour. In last 30 minutes add Irish moss, Fuggles, and spark-
- eloid. Add to 3-1/2 gallons cold water in fermenter. Pitch yeast and
- ferment about 7 months. Bottle and age.
-
- Comments:
-
- I made a batch of this about a year ago and it was so good that I've
- got two batches of it running in tandem. This has a nice balanced
- flavor.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 7 months.
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 84
-
-
-
-
- Marigold Ale
-
- Author: Wayne Allen (wa%cadillac.cad.mcc.com@MCC.COM)
- Digest: January 18, 1991; Issue #567
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 10 pounds Munton & Fison light unhopped extract
- 2 pounds marigold honey
- 4 ounces Fuggles leaf hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Cascade pellets (finish)
- Munton & Fison ale yeast
- champagne yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil malt, honey, Fuggles for 60 minutes. Add Cascades in last five
- minutes. Pour in fermenter with 3-1/2 gallons cold water. Pitch ale
- yeast. When fermentation subsides, pitch champagne yeast. When
- clear, rack to secondary. Let sit a long time and then bottle. Age
- at least one year.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is the best beer I've ever brewed (and getting better by the
- year!) The hops may not seem to be enough, but it is. Watch out, you
- can get addicted to barleywine!
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: Long Time
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 85
-
-
-
-
- Norman Conquest Strong Ale
-
- Author: John Mellby (jmellby@ngst11.csc.ti.com)
- Digest: February 23, 1990, Issue #364
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds American light malt extract syrup
- 3.3 pounds Coopers bitter ale kit
- 3.3 pounds Coopers Draught ale kit
- 1 pound amber malt extract
- 3/4 pound crystal malt
- 2 ounces Northern Brewer hops (boil)
- 2 ounces Willamette hops (finish)
- 2 teaspoons gypsum
- 1 pack MEV 031 high-temp ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Start yeast 2 days ahead and add to quart of sterile wort 3 hours
- before brewing. Add gypsum to 2 gallons water, add crystal malt.
- Bring to boil. Strain out grain. After 10 minutes add Northern
- Brewer hops. 30 minutes into boil add Willamette hops. Boil a few
- more minutes. Remove from heat. Strain into fermenter with cold
- water to make 5 gallons. Pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- What I want to know is, how does the wort know exactly when my back is
- turned so it can instantly boil over? I never see it start to rise,
- but I turn to the sink for one second and when I turn around, the
- stove is covered with molten wort!
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 86
-
-
-
-
- Brain Death Barleywine
-
- Author: Chuck Cox (uunet!bose!synchro!chuck)
- Digest: December 18, 1990, Issue #556
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 17-1/2 pounds pale dry extract
- 3 pounds crystal malt
- 1-1/2 pounds flaked barley
- 1-1/2 pounds wheat malt
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 68 HBUs Chinook hops (boil)
- 20 HBUs Cascade hops (boil)
- 2-1/2 ounces Goldings hops (finish)
- 10 grams Chinook hops (dry hop)
- 20 grams Goldings hops (dry hop)
- 50 grams Cascade hops (dry hop)
- Sierra Nevada ale
- 1/2 - 1 pound Herbal hops substitute
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe makes 5 gallons of full-strength barleywine plus 4 gallons
- half strength. Follow normal procedures, but brew in a 7-gallon
- kettle and then divide the wort into separate fermenters. The special
- hops substitute is a mix of hops repeatedly soaked and sparged in
- lukewarm water for at least 4 hours to eliminate water-soluble off-
- flavors. Special hops are added to the secondary fermenter about 1
- week before kegging. Quantity used depends on quality of herbs/hops.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 87
-
-
-
-
- Nothing Exceeds Like Excess
-
- Author: Martin Lodahl (pbmoss!malodahl@PacBell.COM)
- Digest: November 13, 1990, Issue #536
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 12 pounds 2-row pale malt
- 2 pounds Munich malt
- 2 pounds crystal malt
- 4 pounds Edme light extract
- 4 pounds Alexander's light extract
- 4 ounces dark molasses
- 1/4 cup priming sugar
- 2-1/2 ounce Northern Brewer @8%
- 1-1/2 ounces Kent Goldings @5.2%
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer @2.8%
- 1/2 ounce Cascade @5.2%
- Wyeast Vintner's Choice
- champagne yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash in 18 quarts water @148 degrees (adjust pH to 5.3). Starch con-
- version 2 hours at 150-141 degrees. Mash out 5 minutes at 168 de-
- grees. Sparge at 168 degrees. Boil wort 2-1/2 hours. 90 minutes
- after start of boil, add extracts, molasses, and Northern Brewer hops.
- 30 minutes later, add Kent Goldings hops. In last 15 minutes, add
- Hallertauer and Cascade hops.
-
- Comments:
-
- This was not an easy batch. The yeast took off immediately and blew
- out 1-1/2 gallons through the blow tube. Once the yeast subsided, I
- let it sit for a week and then bottled. I should have taken a sample
- and pitched some Red Star Pasteur champagne yeast because it turns out
- the gravity was still 1.091! The flavor is impossibly syrupy, but
- I'll put in the cellar and forget about it for a few months. This
- could be my most expensive failure yet, then again, maybe not. Maybe
- I can pour it over ice cream...
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: 1.126
- Final Gravity: 1.092
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 88
-
-
-
-
- Barleywine
-
- Author: Fred Condo (fredc@pro-humanist.cts.com)
- Digest: January 16, 1991, Issue #566
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 pounds Alexander's pale malt extract
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 11 AAU Nugget hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Cluster hops (finishing)
- 1/2 ounce Cluster hops (dry)
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe makes 2 gallons. Steep the crystal malt and sparge twice.
- Add Nugget hops and boil. In last few minutes add 1/2 ounce Clusters
- and then dry hop with an additional 1/2 ounce of Clusters. Cool wort
- and pitch yeast.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 89
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 7: HERBAL AND SPICED BEER
-
-
-
- Homebrewers love to experiment with different flavors in their beers,
- and over the past couple years there have been discussions about using
- everything from hot chili peppers to sweet maple syrup in homebrew
- recipes. This chapter describes some of the recipes that have been
- shared. Many of these are Christmas wassails spiced with cinnamon,
- cloves, allspice, or similar spices. These recipes can be either ales
- or lagers...firm rules do not apply.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- 90
-
-
-
-
- Ginger Beer
-
- Author: (BROWN%MSUKBS.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU)
- Digest: August 5, 1989, Issue #221
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds light dry extract
- 2-1/2 cups crystal malt
- 4 ounces grated ginger
- 1 ounce Northern Brewer leaf hops (14% alpha)
- 3/4 ounce Brambling leaf hops
- 1 pack Edme ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil malt, ginger, and Northern Brewer hops in five gallons of water
- for 60 minutes. Remove from heat and add Brambling hops. Allow to
- steep 10 minutes. Force cool, and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- This batch turned out pretty good. It's a light amber color, with a
- light sweetness. The ginger comes through nicely. Light and thirst-
- quenching for the summer months.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 91
-
-
-
-
- Spicy Xmas Beer
-
- Author: John Bates (bates%palmen.Colorado.EDU)
- Digest: October 16, 1990, Issue #518
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds Northwestern light malt extract
- 2 pounds dark malt extract
- 2 pounds wildflower honey
- 2 ounces Hertsburger hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Goldings hops (finish)
- 2 ounces grated ginger (boil)
- 1 ounce grated ginger (finish)
- 2 packs Munton & Fison ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Start yeast. Boil malt extract, honey, boiling hops and boiling gin-
- ger for about 1 hour. Strain. Add finishing hops and ginger. Cool
- rapidly in tub. Pitch started yeast. Ferment. Prime and bottle.
-
- Comments:
-
- This was based on a ginger beer recipe from Papazian's book. It was
- tasty after just one week in the bottle. This is a light beer with a
- nice ginger aroma and flavor.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.049
- Final Gravity: 1.014
- Primary Ferment: 2 weeks
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 92
-
-
-
-
- Ginger Beer
-
- Author: Jay Hersh (jhersh@yy.cicg.rpi.edu)
- Digest: November 18, 1988
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 True-Brew continental light beer kit
- (from Crosby & Baker)
- 3.3 pounds Munton & Fison hopped light extract syrup
- 1 cup corn sugar
- 3 ounces fresh grated ginger root
- 2 packs Edme ale yeast
-
- Comments:
-
- This will produce a light beer with a fairly strong ginger character.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
- 93
-
-
-
-
- Garlic Beer
-
- Author: A.E. Mossberg (aem@mthvax.cs.miami.edu)
- Digest: December 29, 1989, Issue #334
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 can Pilsner lager hopped malt extract
- 4 heads garlic, cleaned
- 6 cups corn sugar (dextrose)
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Bring 2 gallons of water to boil. Add dextrose, malt extract and
- garlic. Boil about 16 minutes or so. Remove from heat. You can
- either make super-garlic beer or regular-garlic beer. For regular
- garlic beer, strain out garlic. Add wort to fermenter with enough
- water to make 5 gallons. Pitch yeast. If making super garlic beer,
- rack to secondary after a few days, straining out garlic when racking.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 94
-
-
-
-
- Spruce Beer
-
- Author: Louis Clark (hplabs!mage!lou)
- Digest: July 4, 1990, Issue #453
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds Munton & Fison dark malt extract
- 3 pounds dry dark extract
- 3 ounces Cascade hops (4.3 alpha)
- 3 teaspoons gypsum
- 1 ounce Cascade hops
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1/2 ounce spruce essence
- Leigh & Williams Beer & Stout yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil malt and boiling hops for 1 hour. In last 10 minutes add the 1
- ounce of Cascade finishing hops and the Irish moss. In the last 2
- minutes add the spruce essence. Chill and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- My tasting notes on this say that at 2-1/2 months after bottling it
- was "fair." This tells me that it was unremarkable. My recollection
- is that it was drinkable but unexciting. Perhaps the dark extract
- overwhelmed the spruce and more spruce essence should have been used.
- Where the bottle says "Sufficient for 8 gallons of spruce beer" they
- may mean for a somewhat lighter beer.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.040
- Final Gravity: 1.018
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 95
-
-
-
-
- Holiday Ale
-
- Author: Doug Roberts (dzzr@lanl.gov)
- Digest: December 6, 1989, Issue #317 (and #318)
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7-1/2 pounds Klages malt
- 1-1/2 pounds crystal malt (90L)
- 1/4 pounds chocolate malt
- 1/4 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound dextrin powder
- 1/2 cup molasses
- 1 teaspoon cardamom
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon ginger
- grated rind of 4 oranges
- 1-1/2 ounce Nugget hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Willamette hops (finish)
- Whitbread ale yeast
- 1/2 cup molasses (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash grains. Add dextrin (I was out of Cara-pils), 1/2 cup molasses,
- spices, boiling hops, and orange peel. Boil 1 hour. Add finishing
- hops in last few minutes. Strain into fermenter. Cool and pitch
- yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- During the boil the spices combined with orange peel and malt made the
- house smell really good---kind of like a beer fruit cake. After smell-
- ing and tasting the wort, I think I've identified one of the secret
- ingredients in Anchor's Christmas Ale: cardamom. I'm guessing they
- use 1/4-1/2 teaspoon per five gallons.
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: 1.045
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 96
-
-
-
-
- Honey Ginger Beer
-
- Author: Oliver Grillmeyer (topramen@ernie.Berkeley.EDU)
- Digest: March 15, 1989, Issue #101
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4 pounds honey
- 6 ounces grated ginger
- 3 pounds light malt extract
- 1 ounce Brewers Gold leaf hops
- 1/2 ounce Northern Brewer hops pellets
- 1/2 ounce Saaz hops pellets yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Use two brew kettles. In the first, add 4 gallons water, honey, and
- ginger. Maintain at 180 degrees for 45 minutes. While first pot is
- heating, add malt extract to 3 gallons water in the second pot. Bring
- to boil. Add 1 ounce of Brewers Gold to boil for 45 minutes. Add 1/2
- ounce of Northern Brewer at 30 minutes. When second pot is removed
- from heat, add 1/2 ounce of Saaz hops and steep. Combine pots, cool,
- and pitch. I also brewed a second batch with the same procedure,
- except that I used 8 pounds of honey instead of 4, 1/2 ounce of
- Northern Brewer hops replaced the 1 ounce of Brewers Gold, and 1/2
- ounce of Galena replaced the 1/2 ounce of Northern Brewer.
-
- Comments:
-
- Six ounces of ginger seems about right to give a nice balanced flavor.
- The ginger was grated in food processor, but it had to struggle as the
- ginger tends to break up into strands that get stuck in the blades.
- (I did not peel the ginger). This beer had an amber color and all
- flavors were readily apparent---hops, malt, ginger, and light honey.
- The color was a medium amber shade.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.051
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 97
-
-
-
-
- Ginger Beer
-
- Author: Jackie Brown (brown@MSUKBS.BITNET)
- Digest: June 3, 1989, Issue #168
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds Munton & Fison dark plain malt extract
- 1-1/2 pounds Munton & Fison plain dark dry extract
- 1 cup corn sugar
- 3/4 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound chocolate malt
- hunk ginger, grated
- 2 ounces Cascade hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Fuggles hops (finish)
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Add crushed grains to 2 gallons cold water. When mixture begins to
- boil, remove grains. Boil 1 hour with malt extracts, ginger and
- Cascade hops. Turn off heat, add Fuggles and steep five minutes.
- Strain into primary, add water to bring to 5 gallons and ferment 3
- days. Rack to secondary. Prime and bottle.
-
- Comments:
-
- My long-term taste bud memory says this was brown, bitter, and slight-
- ly sweet with a great ginger flavor and tingle at the back of the
- throat as it went down. It was overcarbonated (7/8 cup of priming
- sugar is too much!) I wish I could tell you how much ginger I used,
- but I remember I wished it were more. Go for it! I've found nothing
- better to drink with Chinese food.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 3 days
- Secondary Ferment:N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 98
-
-
-
-
- North East Holiday Beer
-
- Author:Jim Conroy (AS2JXC%BINGVMA.BITNET)
- Digest:December 18, 1989, Issue #325
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2 pounds crystal malt
- 6 pounds amber dry malt extract
- 2 ounces Fuggles and Bullion hops (boil)
- 1-1/2 ounce Saaz hops (finish)
- 3 ounces fresh grated ginger
- 1 stick cinnamon
- 1 pack Edme ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep crystal malt until boil is reached. Strain out grain and add
- extract and boiling hops. Boil 60 minutes. Add Saaz hops, ginger and
- cinnamon in last 15 minutes of boil. Cool, top off fermenter and
- pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- This batch had a furious fermentation and blew the blow tube off the
- fermenter, losing about 1-1/2 quarts in the bargain.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
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-
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-
-
- 99
-
-
-
-
- Maple Syrup Stout
-
- Author: Jim, Kipps, reposted by Robert Nielsen
- (robertn%fml@sc.intel.com)
- Digest: December 11, 1989, Issue #320
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds Australian dark extract syrup
- 1-1/2 ounces Bullion hops (boil)
- 12 ounces maple syrup
- ale yeast
- 3/4 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Add six ounces of the maple syrup during the boil and the other 6 in
- the last couple minutes of the boil (much like a finishing hops).
- Total boil time was 1 hour.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is a very good beer. I don't typically drink stouts, but I real-
- ly like this one. I absolutely don't like Guinness, but I do like
- Young's Oatmeal Stout and Rubicon Stout. I think the maple stout is
- better than any of these. It is very smooth going down, and has sweet
- but mellow maple flavored aftertaste. Thanks to Jim Kipps for posting
- this recipe.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 100
-
-
-
-
- Sparky's After-Burner Brew
-
- Author: Marc Light (light@cs.rochester.edu)
- Digest: August 28, 1990, Issue #483
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds John Bull amber malt extract
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 pound dark dry malt
- 1/2 pound corn sugar
- 10 fresh Jalapeno peppers
- 2 ounces Cascade hops
- Munton & Fison ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Chop up Jalapeno peppers and boil them with the wort for 30 minutes or
- so. Strain them out when pouring wort into primary. Rack to second-
- ary about 4 hours after pitching yeast.
-
- Note: When handling jalapenos, be sure to wash hands thor-
- oughly or wear rubber gloves. You'll find out why if you are
- a contact lens wearer. (I discovered this the hard way---
- making pickles, not beer.)
- --- Ed.
-
- Comments:
-
- The beer is amber, clear, has enough hops for me, and has a great
- spicy (bordering on hot) aftertaste.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.020
- Final Gravity: 1.002
- Primary Ferment: 4 hours
- Secondary Ferment: 8 days
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 101
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 8: FRUIT FLAVORED BEER
-
-
-
- Fruit is usually shunned by commercial brewers (with the notable ex-
- ception of Belgian lambic ale brewers) but embraced by homebrewers as
- a distinctive adjunct. Some of these recipes are great, some are of
- questionable taste---you be the judge! These recipes can be either
- ales or lagers...firm rules do not apply.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
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-
-
- 102
-
-
-
-
- Blueberry Ale
-
- Author: Patrick Stirling (pms@Corp.Sun.COM)
- Digest: September 11, 1990, Issue #493
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds British amber extract
- 1-1/2 pound crystal malt
- 2 ounces Northern Brewer hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Fuggles hops (finish)
- Whitbread ale yeast
- 2 pounds fresh frozen blueberries
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep crystal malt while bringing to boil. Remove grains and add
- extract and boiling hops. Boil 60 minutes. Add finish hops and let
- steep 15 minutes. Sparge into ice, mix. Rack to 7-gallon carboy. At
- peak of fermentation add blueberries. Ferment 1 week and rack to
- secondary. Prime with corn sugar.
-
- Comments:
-
- When I tasted this during the bottling stage there was not much blue-
- berry flavor. More blueberries may be required to give a stronger
- taste. The beer came out remarkably clear with a nice reddish tint.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 1 week
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- 103
-
-
-
-
- Apples in the Snow
-
- Author: Shannon Posniewski imagesys!shannon@uu.psi.com
- Digest: October 19, 1990, Issue #521
-
- Ingredients
-
- 6.6 pounds John Bull light malt extract (or other brand)
- 1 pound corn sugar
- 2 ounces Hallertauer hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops (finish)
- 12 pounds apples (9 pounds Granny Smith, 3 # Macintosh)
- water crystals
- 2 packs Edme ale yeast
- 3/4 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Cut apples into 8-10 slices. Put 1-1/2 gallons water into pot, add
- boiling hops and bring to boil. Add extract and corn sugar. Boil 40
- minutes. Add finishing hops and apples. Steep 15 minutes. Pour wort
- into 3-1/2 gallons cold water. Push apples to one side and pitch
- yeast. Ferment 3 weeks.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is based on Papazian"s "Cherries in the Snow." We used Granny
- Smith and Macintosh because we wanted high-fructose varieties---be-
- sides, we like them. Perhaps the use of Saaz or a more delicate hops
- would be in order because this was too hoppy. Beer seems to improve
- with age and after a few months the flavor was described as "immacu-
- late" but with balance tipped more toward hops than apple.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.050
- Final Gravity: 1.015
- Primary Ferment: 3 weeks
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 104
-
-
-
-
- Feelix the Cat Dark Cherry Lager
-
- Author: Mike Herbert (michaelh@homebrew.wv.tek.com)
- Digest: June 18, 1990, Issue #441
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds John Bull dark unhopped malt extract
- 2 pounds Munton & Fison light dry extract
- 1/2 cup black patent malt
- 2 ounces Cascades hops
- 2 tablespoons gypsum
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3-5 pounds pitted chopped cherries
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep black patent malt in 2 gallons of water bringing to boil.
- Strain out grain. Add extract and boil with Cascade hops, gypsum, and
- salt. Boil 60 minutes. Remove from heat. Add finishing hops and
- cherries. Steep 30 minutes. Strain into fermenter with cold water to
- make 5 gallons. Pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe came from Charlie Papazian many years ago. This is sup-
- posed to make a lager, but I've never actually produced a lager with
- this recipe, only an ale. The cherries add a sweetness, but are not
- overpowering in a dark beer. I also tried another cherry beer called
- "Sinfully Red Cherry Ale" from the Spring 1984 issue of Zymurgy. This
- used 10 pounds of cherries and made a much lighter beer.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 105
-
-
-
-
- Dark as the Night Stout
-
- Author: Wayne Allen (wa@cadillac.cad.mcc.com)
- Digest: November 29, 1989, Issue #312
-
- Ingredients:
- 8 cans blueberries (or 10 pints fresh, or 6# frozen)
- 1/2 pound roasted barley
- 1/3 pound black patent malt
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 6.6 pounds John Bull dark unhopped malt extract
- 1-1/2 ounce Fuggles hops (boil)
- 1/2 cup corn sugar (priming)
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Crush and boil blueberries in 1-1/2 gallons of water for 10 minutes.
- Strain out berries. Add grains and steep. Add extract and hops and
- bring to boil. Strain into fermenter with enough cold water to make 5
- gallons. Pitch yeast. Give this lots of time in the secondary fer-
- menter or add champagne yeast after initial fermentation.
-
- Comments:
-
- This tastes like a normal stout, but after 4 or 5 sips, a warm glow
- begins to suffuse your throat and tummy; great for winter nights.
- Don't worry about pectin haze, you definitely won't see it!
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 106
-
-
-
-
- Pick of the Season Cherry Ale
-
- Author: Chuck Coronella (coronellrjds@che.utah.edu)
- Digest: June 26, 1990, Issue #447
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds Laaglander light dry extract
- 1/4 pound crystal malt
- 1/4 pound lactose
- 7-8 pounds fresh sweet cherries
- 1/2 ounce Chinook hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Chinook hops (finish)
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops (dry)
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- Whitbread ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe makes 5-1/2 gallons. Freeze cherries a couple days before
- brewing. Defrost in the fridge. While wort is boiling, remove stems
- and crush cherries. After boiling, pour wort over cherries in fermen-
- ter. Add cold water and pitch yeast. After a couple days, rack to
- secondary, straining out cherries.
-
- Comments:
-
- I decided to use lactose because several people thought Papazian's
- Cherries in the Snow was a bit dry.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 2 days
- Secondary Ferment: 6-8 weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 107
-
-
-
-
- Blackberry Stout
-
- Author: Andy Wilcox (andy@mosquito.cis.ufl.edu)
- Digest: May 9, 1990, Issue #415
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 can Mount Mellick Famous Irish Stout extract
- 3 pounds M&F dark dry malt extract
- 4 pounds frozen blackberries
- 1 pound dark crystal malt
- 1/2 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound roasted barley
- 1-1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops
- 1/2 ounce Fuggles hops
- ale yeast
- corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Start grains in brewpot with cool water. Remove when boil commences.
- Add all malt and Hallertauer hops. Boil 1 hour. Add Fuggles and boil
- 5 more minutes. Remove from heat. Add thawed blackberries and steep
- 15 minutes. Cool. Dump whole mess into primary. After a couple rack
- to secondary, straining out berries.
-
- Comments:
-
- This stout reaches prime in 4-6 weeks and rapidly deteriorates from
- there, acquiring a winey flavor as the residual blackberry sweetness
- erodes. An amateur judge commented, "Good and black. Good mouth
- feel. Unbelievable finish---seems to last forever! Fruit? I want
- the recipe. Nice job."
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 108
-
-
-
-
- Basic Fruit Beer
-
- Author: John Isenhour (LLUG_JI%DENISON.BITNET)
- Digest: June 14, 1989, Issue #177
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4-pound can Alexanders pale malt extract
- 1/2 pound light dry extract
- 10 HBU hops
- 1/4 teaspoon Irish moss
- 2 gallons fruit juice (such as apple,
- pineapple, cranberry, or raspberry)
- yeast
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe was described in the Summer 1987 issue of Zymurgy. See
- the issue for procedural details. When I brew with fruit I do not add
- fruit to the boil, this will set the pectins to creating a haze.
- Instead add them after the boil and steep. I generally use a wheat
- malt extract to emulate a lambic frambozen. Try a Lindemann Framboise
- to see what you're shooting for. They use unmalted wheat in their
- beer.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 109
-
-
-
-
- Framboise
-
- Author: Cher Feinstein (crf@pine.circa.ufl.edu)
- Digest: April 19, 1990, Issue #402
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6-7 pounds light malt extract
- 1/4 pound crystal malt
- 2-1/2 cups raspberry puree
- 1 ounce boiling hops (Hallertauer,
- Saaz, Tettnanger)
- yeast
- 10 cups raspberry puree
-
- Procedure:
-
- Crack, steep, and strain crystal malt before boiling. Add extract and
- hops. Boil. Strain into primary. Add 2-1/2 cups raspberry puree.
- Add enough cold water to make 5 gallons. Pitch yeast. When racking to
- secondary, add another 10 cups raspberry puree.
-
- Comments:
-
- I figured that I'll sterilize anything I use to add the puree, while
- taking my chances with the puree itself (rather than heating it up and
- risking setting the pectins).
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 110
-
-
-
-
- Cranbeery Ale
-
- Author: Tim Phillips (tcp@esl.ESL.com)
- Digest: December 20, 1989, Issue #327
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 pounds pale malt extract syrup
- 1 pound corn sugar
- 2 ounces Hallertauer hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Hallertauer hops (finish)
- 6 pounds cranberries
- ale yeast
- corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Crush cranberries. Boil wort. Add cranberries to wort at time fin-
- ishing hops are added. Turn off heat and steep at least 15 minutes.
- Pour wort into fermenter with enough water to make 5 gallons. Pitch
- yeast. After about 5 days, strain into secondary fermenter, avoiding
- sediment. Bottle after about 1 more week. Age bottles about 2 weeks.
-
- Comments:
-
- This isn't the best beer I've ever had, but the red color and mixture
- of cranberry, champagne, and beer tastes (in that order) together make
- wonderful conversation pieces. A perfect treat for the holidays. The
- cranberry taste is quite dominating: I might try just 2 or 3 pounds of
- cranberries in the future. This recipe is based on Papazian's
- Cherries in the Snow.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 5 days
- Secondary Ferment: 1 week
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 111
-
-
-
-
- Great Pumpkin Bitter
-
-
- Author: Barry Cunningham (abvax!calvin.icd.ab.com!bwc)
- Digest: November 9, 1989, Issue #299
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 can Cooper's bitter hopped malt syrup
- 1-1/2 pound M&F dry malt extract
- 1/4 pound black patent malt
- 1 cup Brer Rabbit molasses
- 1/2 ounce Tettnanger hop pellets
- (boil 30 minutes)
- 1/2 ounce Tettnanger hops pellets (finish)
- 2 sticks cinnamon
- 2-3 ounces fresh grated ginger
- 10 pounds pumpkin mush
- 1/2 cup chopped cilantro
- 1-2 ounces fresh grated ginger
- 2 packs Pasteur champagne yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Steep black patent malt. Remove grain and add extracts. Boil wort 60
- minutes with 2-3 ounces ginger, add boiling hops at 30 minutes. At 10
- minutes add cinnamon. In last couple minutes, add finishing hops.
- Prepare pumpkin while wort is boiling: place pumpkin flesh in blender
- or food processor and mush. Mix chopped cilantro and 1-2 ounces fresh
- ginger in with mush. Place pumpkin mush, wort, and water to make 6-
- 1/2 gallons in primary fermenter. Let primary fermentation proceed 1
- week. Remove pumpkin mush and strain remaining liquid into 5 gallon
- carboy. Rack again after 3 weeks. Bottle after another 2 months.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is quite aromatic and will make a good sipping beer for next
- halloween. It is definitely not for consuming in large quantity.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 1 week
- Secondary Ferment: 2 weeks + 2 months
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 112
-
-
-
-
- Washington Apple Ale
-
- Author: Joe Shirey (jshirey@jarthur.Claremont.edu)
- Digest: March 2, 1990, Issue #370
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4 pounds Telford's Yorkshire nut brown ale hopped malt
- 1 pound honey
- 1/2 pound corn sugar
- 1/2 pound dark crystal malt
- 4 pounds red apples
- 2 teaspoons cinnamon
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- In cold water, place crushed dark crystal malt in a cheesecloth.
- Bring water to boil. When boiling commences, remove grain and add
- Telford's. Boil 15-20 minutes. Add sugar and honey and boil another
- 10 minutes. Reduce heat so that boiling stops. Add cinnamon and
- sliced apples and steep 15 minutes. Remove apples with strainer and
- transfer wort to primary.
-
- Comments:
-
- This beer has a medium body with a hint of apple flavor. It is very
- smooth with little or no bitterness, but that can be changed by adding
- finishing hops.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 113
-
-
-
-
- Raspberry Imperial Stout
-
- Author: Dan Miles (miles@cs.washington.edu)
- Digest: August 28, 1990, Issue #483
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 15-1/4 pounds bulk light extract
- 3/4 pound roasted barley
- 3/4 pound black patent malt
- 3/4 pound chocolate malt
- 2 pounds English crystal malt
- 3-3/4 ounces Bullion pellets (9.6 alpha)
- 1-1/4 ounces Northern Brewer pellets (6.7% alpha)
- 2 ounces Kent Goldings pellets
- 13 pounds fresh raspberries
- 4 teaspoons gypsum
- Sierra Nevada yeast
- 1 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- This makes 6-1/2 to 7 gallons. This is based on Papazian's recipe
- from the Summer 1990 issue of Zymurgy, except that I use more rasp-
- berries than Charlie. Follow his directions, or E-mail me for direc-
- tions. (Directions are pretty standard.)
-
- The Bullion hops and Northern Brewer are used for bittering and are
- added to the boil. The Kent Goldings pellets are used for dry-
- hopping.
-
- Comments:
-
- This had a very strong raspberry taste with a slightly coffee/dark
- malt and hoppy/bitter aftertaste. The raspberry taste is accompanied
- by a sort of astringency or acidity that will supposedly soften with
- age. It's still very young for an Imperial stout.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.087
- Final Gravity: 1.022
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 114
-
-
-
-
- My Framboise Recipe
-
- Author: Cher Feinstein (crf@pine.circa.ufl.edu)
- Digest: August 22, 1990, Issue #479
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6.6 pounds wheat malt extract
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 1 ounce Hallertauer hops
- 1 pack Wyeast #3056, Bavarian wheat
- 5 or 6 bags frozen raspberries (12 ounce bags)
-
- Procedure:
-
- The wheat malt should ideally be a 60-40 mix of wheat and barley. The
- crystal malt is cracked and steeped in hot water for 20 minutes, then
- strained. The hops are then added and the mixture is boiled for 45
- minutes. Chill and add yeast. Allow the beer to ferment for 7 days
- and then prepare raspberry mixture by defrosting berries and using
- blender to puree. Pitch in fermenter and after 48 hours, bottle.
- Next time I make this, I will modify the recipe to use 1 can (6.6#) of
- Ireks wheat malt, 3-4 pounds of light DME, 1 ounce of Hallertauer (35
- minute boil), and again, Wyeast #3056. By using a 100% wheat extract,
- such as Ireks, I can control the amount of barley extract to assure
- 60% wheat to 40% barley.
-
- Comments:
-
- I've been getting a large head with good lace, and an enormous aroma
- of raspberries. The brew is also crystal clear, with a deep ruby
- color (which I consider to be just plain luck since wheat beers are
- characteristically cloudy). As aging continues, any hints of astrin-
- gency are disappearing. It will probably need 4P6 months aging time,
- quite possibly more.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 7 days
- Secondary Ferment: 48 hours
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 115
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 9: SPECIALTY ALE
-
-
-
- This is a catch-all chapter for various types of ale that don't fit
- neatly into a larger category,for example, Scotch ale, brown ale, or
- Kolsch. Scotch ales are typically dark brown strong beers brewed to a
- starting gravity of about 1.055.
-
- Brown ales were historically brewed in the U.K. as a lightly-hopped
- medium-bodied beer. They are usually brewed from pale malt with
- additional crystal, caramel, or roasted malts for coloring. These are
- not usually very heavy beers, and the English mild may be brewed to a
- gravity as low as 1.035 while other brown ales will hover around
- 1.050.
-
- For more information about brown ales, Scotch ales, or any other style
- in this chapter, see Fred Eckhardt's The Essentials of Beer Style, or
- Michael Jackson's World Guide to Beer.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- 116
-
-
-
-
- My Own Scotch Ale
-
- Author: Todd Enders (enders@plains.NoDak.edu)
- Digest: January 16, 1991, Issue #566
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds Klages 2-row malt
- 1 pound Munich malt (10L)
- 1 pound Dextrin (Cara-pils) malt
- 1/2 pound crystal malt (80L)
- 4 ounces black patent malt
- 1 cup dark molasses
- 3/4 ounce East Kent Goldings hops (6.2 alpha)
- 1 pack Wyeast #1028 London Ale
- 2/3 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mash in 2 gallons water at 138 degrees, adjust pH to 5.2 using Cal-
- cium Carbonate. Protein rest 30 minutes at 158 degrees. Conversion
- rest 30 minutes at 158 degrees. Mash out 5 minutes at 168 degrees.
- Sparge with 5 gallons water at 165 degrees. Boil 90 minutes, adding
- hops in last 30 minutes. Chill wort, pitch yeast and ferment 1-2
- days. Rack to secondary for 5 more days and bottle.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is the first try at formulating my own recipe. It turned out
- quite nice, malty with just a touch of hops. You may not be able to
- drink just one! This is one of the smoothest batches I ever brewed.
- It is really smooth even after only 2 weeks in the bottle. The rather
- intense malt flavor and low hopping rate makes it a refreshing change
- of pace from my steady production of IPA.
-
- Method: Full mash (decoction)
- Original Gravity: 1.055
- Final Gravity: 1.015
- Primary Ferment: 2 days
- Secondary Ferment: 5 days
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 117
-
-
-
-
- Sort of Nut Brown Ale
-
- Author: Todd Enders (enders@plains.NoDak.edu)
- Digest: June 27, 1990, Issue #448
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2.4 pounds pale ale malt
- 0.4 pound crystal malt (80L)
- 1/4 pound pan roasted barley
- 1/2 cup dark molasses
- 1/2 ounce Willamette hops (5.5 alpha)
- Wyeast #1028
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe makes 2 gallons. Raw unmalted barley was roasted in a pan
- over medium heat until the outside was quite dark but the inside was
- only tan---stir often to avoid scorching. Mashin in 132 degrees (5
- quarts of water) at pH of 5.2 Mash 2 hours at 152-153 degrees. Mash
- out 5 minutes at 168 degrees. Sparge in 2-1/2 gallons of 165 degree
- water. Boil 90 minutes adding hops 30 minutes before end of boil.
- Chill and strain and pitch yeast.
-
- Comments:
-
- The toasted barley probably had a Lovibond rating around 80-100, the
- unfermented wort was delicious. This is similar to many stout recipes
- but the barley isn't roasted long enough to give it that much dark-
- ness.
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: 1.051
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 118
-
-
-
-
- Full Moon Ale
-
- Author: David Haberman (habermand@afal-edwards.af.mil)
- Digest:March 22, 1989, Issue #106
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds dark Australian DME
- 1 pound caramel crystal malt
- 1-1/2 ounce Willamette hops
- 1-1/2 ounce Fuggles hops
- 1 pack Wyeast #1098: British Ale
- 3/4 cup corn sugar (priming)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil 2 gallons of water and turn off heat. Add crystal malt and steep
- about 15 minutes. Strain through muslin into kettle. Heat another
- gallon of water to 170 degrees. Pour through grain into pot. Heat to
- boiling and add DME and 1/3 of hops. After 45 minutes add another 1/3
- of hops. Turn off heat after 15 minutes and add last 1/3 of hops.
- Steep. Cool wort and add 2 gallons of cold water. Pour in wort and
- pitch yeast. Rack to secondary after 4 days top off with enough water
- to make 5 gallons. After 4 weeks, prime and bottle.
-
- Comments:
-
- I thought that the final gravity of this beer was a bit high, but the
- beer came out tasting great and no bottles exploded. In order to call
- this a porter it needs more hops, therefore I think it is a Scotch
- ale.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.055
- Final Gravity: 1.017
- Primary Ferment: 4 days
- Secondary Ferment: 4 weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 119
-
-
-
-
- Cat's Paw Brown Ale
-
- Author: Doug Roberts (roberts%studguppy@lanl.gov)
- Digest: March 15, 1990, Issue #378
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7 pounds Klages malt
- 1/4 pound chocolate malt
- 1/4 pound black patent malt
- 1/2 pound crystal malt (90L)
- 1 ounce Willamette hops (boil)
- 4/5 ounce Perle hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Willamette hops (finish)
- 1 teaspoon gypsum
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- Whitbread ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- The mash was done using Papazian's temperature-controlled mash. The
- boiling hops (Willamette and Perle) equal 9.84 AAUs. The finishing
- hops are added after the boil (while chilling with an immersion chill-
- er). The ale yeast is rehydrated in 1/2 cup of 100 degree water.
-
- Comments:
-
- This batch was what my fond memories of drinking London Brown Ales in
- Canterbury, UK were all about. A classic.
-
- Method: Full mash
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
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-
-
- 120
-
-
-
-
- Geordie Brown Ale
-
- Author: Elaine May (elaine@hpmtlx.hp.com)
- Digest: February 21, 1990, Issue #362
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2 cans Geordie Extra Strong ale
- 1 cup dark brown sugar
- 2 cups corn sugar
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 1/2 cup maltodextrin
- 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1 ounce Willamette leaf hops
-
- Procedure:
-
- Bring grain to boil in 1 gallon water; remove grain when water starts
- to boil. Add another 1/2 gallon of water and bring to boil again. Add
- extract and sugars, boil for 15 minutes. Add Irish moss and hops for
- last 5 minutes of boil. Put it in fermenter with enough water to make
- 5 gallons. Add ale yeast and wait.
-
- Comments:
-
- The beer is a brown ale with sweetness from the sugars and crystal
- malt; not much hop flavor. The maltodextrin contributes a strange
- slightly syrupy quality (I think)---I might leave it out next time.
- Anyway, I thought it was a nice, drinkable brown ale.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: 1.057
- Final Gravity: 1.018
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 121
-
-
-
-
- Boonesburger Winterale
-
- Author: Florian Bell (florianb@tekred.cna.tek.com)
- Digest: December 15, 1989, Issue #324
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 pounds light dry extract
- 3 pounds 2-row pale malt
- 1/2 pound crystal malt (40L)
- 2 ounces roasted barley
- 4 ounces wheat malt
- 2 ounces dextrin malt
- 2 ounces Cascade hops (5.2% alpha)
- 1/2 ounce Tettnanger hops (4.9% alpha)
- 1/2 ounce Perle hops (7.2% alpha)
- 1/2 ounce Kent Goldings hops (5.2% alpha)
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 1 pack Wyeast Irish
-
- Procedure:
-
- I used Papazian's partial mash method, except used 2 gallons of sparge
- water. I got 18 pints of sparge and added two pints of water to the
- boil, along with the dry extract. Boil 60 minutes. Add 1 ounce Cas-
- cade, 1/4 ounce Perle, and 1/4 ounce Tettnanger at 40 minutes. Add
- 1/2 ounce Cascade, 1/4 ounce Perle, and 1/4 ounce Tettnanger at 30
- minutes. Add 1/2 ounce Cascade, and 1/2 ounce Kent Goldings in hop
- bag at 3 minutes. Strain into primary fermenter. Transfer hops bag
- to primary.
-
- Comments:
-
- Twelve days in the bottle was sufficient. I prefer this over Widmer
- Festbier, after which it was patterned. It's also a lot cheaper.
-
- Method: Partial mash
- Original Gravity: 1.060
- Final Gravity: 1.012
- Primary Ferment: 3 days
- Secondary Ferment: 9 days
-
-
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-
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-
-
- 122
-
-
-
-
- Barrel Bottom Black Bitter
-
- Author: Ted Manahan (tedm@hpldola.hp.com)
- Digest: November 23, 1989, Issue #309
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds Australian dark malt extract syrup
- 2/3 pounds chocolate malt
- 1/3 pound crystal malt
- 2 ounces Perle hops
- 1-1/2 ounces Cascade hops
- Burton liquid ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Soak malt in a pot of hot water for 1 hour. While soaking, begin
- boiling Australian dark malt with the Perle hops. After 1 hour, add
- Cascade hops and turn off heat. Steep about 30 minutes. Strain
- everything into primary and add cold water to bring volume to 5
- gallons. Pitch yeast when cool.
-
- Comments:
-
- Barrel Bottom is a very dark, rich and bitter brew with a full head of
- tan foam. It could pass as a stout. The only bad part is that my 5
- gallons is almost gone, in less than two months. Ingredients were
- obtained from William's Brewing, the Australian extract is their dark-
- er variety.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
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- 123
-
-
-
-
- Chimight (Chimay Light)
-
- Author: Chuck Cox (bose!synchro!chuck@uunet.UU.NET)
- Digest: December 18, 1990, Issue #556
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 15 pounds pale unhopped extract
- 3/4 pound brown sugar
- 1 pound crystal malt
- 1 pound flaked barley
- 1 pound pale malt
- 1/2 pound wheat malt
- 1/4 teaspoon gypsum
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- 7 HBUs Northern Brewer hops (boil)
- 14 HBUs Chinook hops (boil)
- 1 ounce Saaz hops (finish)
- 1/2 ounce Tettnanger hops (finish)
- Chimay yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 9-gallon partial mash recipe. Use standard procedures,
- brewing about 7 gallons of wort in a 10-gallon kettle, followed by a
- 7-gallon primary and 2 5-gallon secondaries. Then keg (or bottle).
- The yeast was cultured from a bottle of Chimay.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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- 124
-
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-
-
- Chimay Trippel
-
- Author: Chuck Cox (bose!synchro!chuck@uunet.UU.NET)
- Digest: December 18, 1990, Issue #556
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3.3 pounds pale unhopped extract syrup
- 12 pounds pale dry extract
- 1 pound 6-row pale malt
- 1 pound wheat malt
- 1 pound Vienna malt
- 2 pounds light brown sugar
- 1/2 pound corn sugar
- 10 grams coriander
- 8 grams orange peel
- 4 HBUs Saaz hops (boil)
- 4 HBUs Hallertauer hops (boil)
- 4-1/2 HBUs Fuggles hops (boil)
- handful hops (finish)
- 1 teaspoon Irish moss
- Chimay yeast culture
-
- Procedure:
-
- This is a 7-gallon partial mash recipe. Use standard procedures,
- brewing about 7 gallons of wort in a 10-gallon kettle, followed by a
- 7-gallon primary and 2 5-gallon secondaries or a 7-gallon secondary.
- Then keg (or bottle). The yeast was cultured from a bottle of Chimay.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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- 125
-
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-
-
- Old Peculiar
-
- Author: Mike Fertsch (FERTSCH@adcl.RAY.COM)
- Digest: August 11, 1989, Issue #225
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4 pounds dark malt extract
- 1/2 pound roast barley
- 1/2 pound crystal malt
- 2 pounds dark brown sugar
- 2 ounces Fuggles hops
- 5 saccharin tablets
- yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe uses saccharin, but I will not use this in my beer; in-
- stead I may add brewer's licorice or lactose for sweetness. The
- amount of fermentables also seems low; I would add a pound or two of
- light extract to increase the gravity to the mid-fifties. The recipe
- also calls for priming with 3 ounces of black treacle, which is molas-
- ses. This seems low, and it also seems that different brands would
- contain different amounts of fermentable sugar.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe is for one of my favorite old ales---Old Peculiar. It
- comes from Dave Line's book Brewing Beers Like Those You Buy.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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-
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- 126
-
-
-
-
- Scottish Steamy Ale
-
- Author: Ken Ellinwood (!sun!suntzu!aimla!ken)
- Digest: November 9, 1989, Issue #299
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds M&F light dry extract
- 1 pound Scottish crystal malt (40L)
- 1 ounce Northern Brewer leaf hops (boil)
- 1/2 ounce Northern Brewer (finish)
- Brewers Choice American ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boiling hops are put in kettle for a 55 minute boil. The finishing
- hops are put in for an additional 5 minutes.
-
- Comments:
-
- My last batch came out too light because I added only 1/2 pound of the
- crystal malt---I was convinced it was in the 90 Lovibond range. I
- also used 6.6 pounds of canned extract. The resulting beer was about
- 1/3 as dark as the original.
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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-
-
- 127
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 10: MEAD AND OTHER BEVERAGES
-
- Meadmakers will bend your ear for hours about the rich long tradition
- surrounding their honey-based brew. Mead is a sublime elixir, favored
- by many homebrewers for its variety and subtlety. It is, however,
- much stronger than typical beers, and also takes months or years to
- properly ferment and age.
-
- Mead flavored with apple juice is called a cyser; if flavored with
- grape juices, it's called pyment; if it uses other fruit juices, it's
- called melomel; it it draws it' s flavor from herbs and spices, it's
- called metheglin. There are several books available on mead, the one
- used by most digest subscribers seems to be Acton & Duncan's Making
- Mead.
-
- Other beverages included in this chapter are easy recipes for making
- hard cider and a couple recipes for making liqueurs.
-
-
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- 128
-
-
-
-
- Basic Small Mead
-
- Author: Cher Feinstein (crf@pine.circa.ufl.edu)
- Digest: September 30, 1989, Issue #267
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2-3 cloves
- 2 sticks cinnamon
- 2 thin slices ginger
- 2-4 teaspoons orange peel
- 2 pounds honey yeast
- 1/4 cup vodka or grain alcohol
-
- Procedure:
-
- In a 1-gallon pot, simmer cloves (lightly cracked), cinnamon (broken),
- and ginger. Add orange peel. The amount of orange peel will vary
- depending on type of honey used. Use less orange peel with orange
- blossom honey, for example. Simmer.
-
- Add water to bring volume to 3 quarts. Return to simmer. Add honey,
- stirring constantly. Do not boil! Skim off any white scum. If scum
- is yellow, reduce heat. When no more scum forms, remove from heat,
- cover pot, and leave overnight. The next day, strain to remove as
- much spice particles as possible. Pitch yeast. Replace pot cover.
-
- Twelve hours later, rack mead to 1-gallon jug, leaving dregs of yeast.
- Top off jug, bringing to base of neck. Take a piece of clean paper
- towel, fold into quarters, and put over mouth of jug. Seal with rub-
- ber band. Ferment for 36 hours, replacing paper towel whenever it
- becomes fouled. Refrigerate 8-12 hours. Rack to new jug and put back
- in refrigerator for 12 hours. Add 1/4 cup vodka to kill yeast. Rack
- to fresh jug. Refrigerate 3-4 days. Bottle.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is a quickie mead, drinkable in 2 weeks, however, it does improve
- with age. Aging at least a couple months is recommended. This mead is
- excellent chilled.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 2 days
- Secondary Ferment: 2 weeks
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
- 129
-
-
-
-
- Hard Cider
-
- Author: (jwhite@anovax.enet.dec.com)
- Digest: October 2, 1990, Issue #508
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 5 gallons sweet cider
- 3 pounds brown sugar
- 3 pounds honey
- 2 packs champagne yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Strain 3 gallons of cider into a 5-gallon carboy. Strain 1/2 gallon
- into pot and heat enough to allow sugar and honey to thoroughly dis-
- solve. Pour into carboy and finish filling to neck. Pitch yeast and
- seal with airlock. When fermentation stops, bottle. Prime with sugar
- to add carbonation.
-
- Comments:
-
- For this recipe to turn out well, do not use pasteurized apple juice.
- My last batch took 3 weeks to ferment. If you notice unpleasant
- smells during this time, you can ignore them. Boy, does this turn out
- great!
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 3 weeks
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
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-
- 130
-
-
-
-
- Blueberry Mead
-
- Author: Jonathan Corbet (gaia!jon@handies.ucar.edu)
- Digest: November 28, 1988
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 7-10 pounds fresh blueberries
- 1-2 pounds corn sugar
- 1-2 ounces hops (Cascades is fine)
- 10 pounds honey
-
- Procedure:
-
- To make 6-1/2 gallons of mead, Boil the honey, sugar, and hops for at
- least an hour (although boiling honey is not favored by most digest
- subscribers, it works fine and is the method used by Papazian). Clean
- berries and mash well. Put mashed berries, hot wort, and enough water
- to make 6-1/2 gallons into a fermenter. Pitch yeast. After one week,
- strain out berries and rack to secondary. Ferment at least one more
- month and then bottle, priming with corn sugar and perhaps some lemon
- grass tea. Age 6 months to a year.
-
- Comments:
-
- This mead usually comes out quite dry. This recipe makes 6-1/2
- gallons.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 1 week
- Secondary Ferment: 4 weeks+
-
-
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-
- 131
-
-
-
-
- Peach Melomel
-
- Author: Michael Bergman (bergman%odin.m2c.org@RELAY.CS.NET)
- Digest: March 1, 1989, Issue #90
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 6 pounds peaches
- 3/4 pint elderflowers
- 2-1/2 pounds acacia honey
- 1/30 ounce tannin
- Graves yeast
- 1/4 ounce tartaric acid
- 1/4 ounce malic acid
-
- Procedure:
-
- Press peaches (after removing pits). Dissolve honey in 4 pints warm
- water, blend in peach juice along with acid, tannin, and nutrients.
- Add 100 ppm sulfite (2 campden tablets). After 24 hours, add yeast
- starter, allow to ferment 7 days before adding elderflowers. Ferment
- on flowers for 3 days then strain off lowers and top off to 1 gallon
- with cold water. Ferment until specific gravity drops to 10, then
- rack. Rack again when gravity drops to 5, and add 1 tablet campden.
- Rack again when when a heavy deposit forms, or after 3 months, which-
- ever comes first. Add another campden tablet. Rack again every 3-4
- months, adding a tablet after every second racking.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe is based on procedures outlined in Making Mead, by Bryan
- Acton and Peter Duncan. They advocate the use of campden rather than
- boiling because they feel that after boiling for a long time most of
- the essences of the honey are gone. Read the "Basic Procedures" sec-
- tion of Acton & Duncan for more info.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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- 132
-
-
-
-
- Riesling Pyment
-
- Author: Jackie Brown (BROWN@MSUKBS.BITNET)
- Digest: June 24, 1989, Issue #184
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4-1/2 pounds wildflower honey
- 5-1/2 pounds partial blueberry honey
- 2 tablespoons acid blend
- 1 tablespoon pectic enzyme
- 4 pounds Alexander's Johanissberg Riesling extract
- 1 pack Red Star champagne yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil honey, acid, enzyme and Riesling extract for 1 hour (I have since
- learned that honey is best not boiled; subsequent batches have been
- made by holding the mixture for 2 hours). Cool and pitch yeast. Rack
- to secondary after 8 days. Bottle after 4 months.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is more winey than your straight mead, but very pleasant. Medium
- dry and spritzig---very nice as a table wine. Those of you set up to
- crush your own grapes might try a grape honey mix. A drink of noble
- history!
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 8 days
- Secondary Ferment: 4 months
-
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- 133
-
-
-
-
- Rice Wine---Saki
-
- Author: David Herron (mailrus!ukma!davids.UUCP!david)
- Digest: January 10, 1989, Issue #48
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2-1/2 pounds rice (husked or raw)
- 1/2 pint grape concentrate
- 7 pints hot water
- 2-1/2 pounds corn sugar or honey
- 3 teaspoons acid blend
- 3/4 teaspoon yeast energizer
- 1 tablet Campden
- 1 pack sherry yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Wash and crush rice. Place rice in nylon straining bag and place in
- primary. Pour hot water over rice and stir in all ingredients except
- yeast and engergizer. Wait 48 hours. Add yeast and energizer and
- cover primary. Stir daily, checking gravity and pressing pulp light-
- ly. When gravity reaches 1.050 (2-3 days), add another 1/4 pound
- dissolved sugar or honey per gallon. When gravity drops to 1.030 (6-7
- days) strain any juice from bag. Rack to secondary. Attach airlock.
- Rack again in 2 months, if necessary. Bottle when ready. It is
- possible to continue building up alcohol by adding additional sugar
- until fermentation ceases. For a sweeter drink, add 1/2 teaspoon
- stabilizer and 1/4 pound dissolved sugar.
-
- NOTE: Any additional sugar added should be corn sugar, not cane sugar.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe came from a collection of wine recipes by Raymond
- Massaccesi titled Winemakers Recipe Handbook. Various digest sub-
- scribers question the authenticity of this recipe. Sake should con-
- tain only rice---no corn sugar, grape concentrate, or honey. Authen-
- tic sake should also be inoculated with koji. There is a sake brewery
- in Berkeley, California, that will conduct tours for those interested
- in learning more about sake. Sake is discussed by Fred Eckhardt in
- Best of Beer and Brewing Vol. 1-5, available from the AHA. Koji is
- available from Great Fermentations of Santa Rosa.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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-
-
- 134
-
-
-
-
- Glog
-
- Author: A.E. Mossberg (aem@mthvax.miami.edu)
- Digest: December 25, 1988
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 quart cheap red port
- 1 quart cheap vodka
- 1-1/2 cups sugar
- 4 cups water
- 8 pods cardamom
- 20 cloves
- 1 peel of orange
- 2 sticks cinnamon broken
- 1 handful raisins
- 4 almonds
-
- Procedure:
-
- Dissolve sugar in water and add the last 6 ingredients. Boil 15 min-
- utes then add vodka and port. Bring back to boil and remove from
- heat. Serve warm.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is a traditional Swedish holiday drink. It cures the common cold.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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- 135
-
-
-
-
- Hard Cider
-
- Author: A.E. Mossberg (aem@mthvax.miami.edu)
- Digest: December 23, 1988
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 gallon unfiltered apple juice
- 1/3 packet yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Remove 1 pint of juice to allow room for yeast activity. Add yeast.
- Let sit 4-10 days. Replace pint of juice. Place in refrigerator and
- enjoy.
-
- Comments:
-
- Sometimes I rack the cider before placing in refrigerator because
- there is a heavy build up of dead yeast and particulate matter from
- the apple juice.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 4-10 days
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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- 136
-
-
-
-
- Berry Liqueur
-
- Author: Nicolette Bonhomme (bb13093@pbn33.prime.com)
- Digest: December 21, 1988
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 quart frozen raspberries
- 1 quart frozen blueberries
- 1 can frozen grape juice concentrate
- 1 quart brandy
- sugar
-
- Procedure:
-
- Soak berries, grape juice and brandy for at least one week. Strain
- into a jar, being sure to squeeze all juice out of fruit. Increase
- volume by 25-50% with a sugar syrup made from half water and half
- sugar. Cool syrup to room temperature before adding to liqueur mix.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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- 137
-
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-
-
- Prickly Pear Cactus Mead
-
- Author:John Isenhour (LLUG_JI.DENISON.BITNET)
- Digest: June 15, 1989, Issue #177
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 20 pounds Mesquite honey
- 75-100 ripe prickly pear cactus fruits
- 2 packs sherry wine yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- See Papazian's book. This recipe was based on it.
-
- Comments:
-
- This is Dave Spaulding's version that won the grand prize at the 1986
- Arizona State Fair.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: 1.158
- Final Gravity: 1.050
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: 5 months
-
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- 138
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-
-
- Chuck's Homemade Ozark Rootbeer
-
- Author: Chuck Cox (bose!chuck@uunet.UU.NET)
- Digest: January 9, 1990, Issue #338
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 2 ounces birch beer extract
- 10 ounces root beer extract
- 1 pound honey
- 1 cup blackstrap molasses
- 1 cup grade B maple syrup
- 1 gallon sugar (about 8 pounds)
-
- Procedure:
-
- This recipe makes 15 gallons. Mix all ingredients in a standard keg.
- Add water to fill keg. Carbonate. Drink.
-
- Comments:
-
- I thought the molasses taste was a bit harsh and will try either reg-
- ular molasses, or use less. I will also try substituting 2 ounces of
- sarsaparilla extract for 2 ounces of the rootbeer extract. This
- recipe makes a strong tasting rootbeer with about half the sweetness
- of commercial rootbeers. This was made with artificial carbonation,
- but it could be adapted to make alcoholic rootbeer by substituting
- malt extract for some of the sugar.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
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- 139
-
-
-
-
- Nathan's Ginger Beer
-
- Author: Bill Crick
- Digest: December 1, 1989, Issue #314
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1/2 pound fresh ginger, peeled and grated
- 1 lemon
- 5 teaspoons cream of tarter
- 5 cups white sugar
- 2-1/2 gallons water
-
- Procedure:
-
- This stuff is dangerous---do not make it. WARNINGS: Use only real
- champagne bottles, beer bottles will explode. If left out of fridge
- more than 4 weeks, bottles will explode. Do not leave in fridge more
- than 4 weeks after bottles start to scare you, otherwise, bottles will
- explode. Set off outside---corks go 60-70'. Do not let bottles sit
- around too long---I'm not kidding!
-
- Peel and grate ginger. Grate lemon, squeeze, and cut remainder into
- slices. Boil all ingredients, mixing. Cool to 80 degrees or less and
- add lager yeast. Ferment 3-7 days, then bottle in champagne bottles.
- Wire down plastic corks. Leave out 1 week, then move to cool area.
- Chill and test open 1 bottle each week until they start to scare you,
- then put all bottles in fridge and drink within 2 weeks.
-
- Comments:
-
- I've been making this for many years. It is very carbonated, and
- quite refreshing. Also, because it has a limited shelf life (after
- which it explodes), it prompts lots of impromptu ginger beer parties.
- I call several friends to say "I'm setting off a dozen ginger beers
- tomorrow afternoon. Wanna come?"
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 3-7 days
- Secondary Ferment: Couple weeks
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 140
-
-
-
-
- My Daddy's Beer Recipe
-
- Author: Stephen Hansen (hansen@gloworm.Stanford.edu)
- Digest: July 18, 1990, Issue #462
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 1 can Blue Ribbon malt
- 1 pack Fleishmann's yeast
- 1 cup rice
- 1 tablespoon salt
- 5 pounds powdered cane sugar
-
- Procedure:
-
- In a large (3 gallon) porcelain pan, add 3 quarts water and bring to
- boil. Add sugar, stirring. Bring back up to boil and add 1 can of
- malt. Return to boil again and let simmer for 15 minutes. Fill large
- glass 1/2 full of luke warm water (not over 130 degrees) and add rice,
- yeast, and salt.
-
- Clean crock and fill 1/3 full of warm water. Pour in wort. Add cold
- water to within 3 inches of top. Add yeast solution and cover. After
- 6-10 hours remove foam with wire strainer. Let sit until hydrometer
- says "bottle." Fill bottles, adding 1/2 teaspoon sugar to each. Cap
- and let stand 21 days.
-
- Comments:
-
- Back when I first started making beer (about 20 years ago now) I ac-
- tually made several batches using this recipe. The results varied
- from barely drinkable to snail bait. I especially like his comparison
- in the last line of the original---"This should make 5 cases of pint
- bottles of beer equal to or superior to Millers High Life."
-
- Method: Extract
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 141
-
-
-
-
- Romulan Ale
-
- Author: Karl Wolff (1st recipe), Robert N. (2nd recipe)
- (wolff@aqm.ssc.af.mil) (robertn@fml.intel.com)
- Digest: November 6, 1990 and November 7, 1990, Issues #531 and #532
-
- Ingredients:
-
- Karl's Recipe:
-
- 1 fifth Bacardi 151
- 1 fifth Blue Curaco
- 2 liters Sprite or 7-Up
-
- Robert's Recipe:
-
- 1 fifth Bacardi 151
- 1 fifth Everclear
- 1 fifth Blue Curaco
-
- Procedure:
-
- Mix all ingredients. Chill for approximately 3 hours and serve.
-
- Comments:
-
- Robert comments that this is done in shots because the average human
- cannot stand up to a tall cool glass of Romulan ale; he suggests that
- Karl's recipe may be fit for human consumption.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 142
-
-
-
-
- Cyser
-
- Author: Arun Welch (welch@cis.ohio-state.edu)
- Digest: November 14, 1990, Issue #537
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 4 gallons fresh cider (no Pot.Sorb)
- 5 to 6 pounds honey
- 1 gallon water
- 1 large stick cinnamon
- 5 cloves
- 2 pods cardamom
- 2 packs Red Star Pasteur champagne yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Simmer the spices in the water for 10 minutes. Dissolve honey. Sim-
- mer and strain crud until there isn't any more. Transfer to primary,
- along with cider (this should bring primary to a good pitching temper-
- ature). Pitch yeast and wait 1 to 2 weeks for the foam to die down.
- Transfer to secondary. Ferment in secondary 3-6 months. Bottle and
- age another 3 or more months.
-
- Comments:
-
- I made up this recipe as I went along.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: 1-1/2 weeks
- Secondary Ferment: 3 to 6 months
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 143
-
-
-
-
- Wassail Mead
-
- Author:Mal Card card@apollo.hp.com
- Digest: November 15, 1990, Issue #538
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 12-1/2 pounds light clover honey
- 4 teaspoons acid blend
- 5 teaspoons yeast nutrient
- wine yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Add honey, acid blend, and yeast nutrient to 2 gallons of water and
- boil for 1/2 hour. Add this to 1-1/2 gallons of cold water in the
- primary fermenter. Pitch yeast when the temperature reaches 70-75
- degrees. Use a blow off tube if you use a carboy. Allow fermentation
- to proceed for 3 weeks or more (up to several months). When the mead
- becomes fairly clear, rack to secondary. Attack air-lock. Leave the
- mead to sit at least 3 weeks. When yeast settles to bottom and is
- clear, it is ready to bottle. Adding 3/4 cup of corn sugar at
- bottling will produce a sparkling mead. Sparkling meads should not be
- made with an original gravity higher than 1.090.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: 1.100
- Final Gravity: 1.000
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 144
-
-
-
-
- Quick Mead
-
- Author: Kevin Karplus (karplus@ararat.ucsc.edu)
- Digest: November 16, 1990, Issue #538
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3 gallons water
- 5 pounds honey
- 1/3 cup jasmine tea
- 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
- 2 teaspoons cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
- 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- ale yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil water, adding tea and spices. Remove from heat and stir in
- honey. (Some mead makers boil the honey, skimming the scum as it
- forms). Cover boiled water, and set aside to cool (this usually takes
- a long time, so start on the next step). Make a yeast starter solu-
- tion by boiling a cup of water and a tablespoon or two of honey. Add
- starter to cooled liquid. Cover and ferment using blow tube or fer-
- mentation lock. Rack two or three times to get rid of sediment.
-
- The less honey, the lighter the drink, and the quicker it can be made.
- 1 pound per gallon is the minimum, 5 pounds per gallon is about the
- maximum for a sweet dessert wine. This mead is a metheglin because of
- the tea. The yeast is pitched one day after starting the batch, the
- crud skimmed about 10 days later, then wait 3 days and rack to second-
- ary. Wait 2 more weeks and bottle---about 4 weeks from start to fin-
- ish.
-
- Comments:
-
- Yield is 3.1 gallons. Excellent clarity, fairly sweet flavor, slight
- sediment, light gold color. An excellent batch.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 145
-
-
-
-
- Sack Mead
-
- Author: Kevin Karplus (karplus@ararat.ucsc.edu)
- Digest: November 16, 1990, Issue #538
-
- Ingredients:
-
- 3 gallons water
- 16 pounds honey
- 1/4 cup keemun tea
- 1/4 cup oolong tea
- 2 teaspoons cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon whole anise seed
- 18 clusters cardamom, crushed
- 20 allspice, crushed
- 1 inch galingale root, crushed
- yeast
- unflavored gelatin (fining)
-
- Procedure:
-
- Boil water, adding tea and spices. Remove from heat and stir in
- honey. (Some mead makers boil the honey, skimming the scum as it
- forms). Cover boiled water, and set aside to cool (this usually takes
- a long time, so start on the next step). Make a yeast starter solu-
- tion by boiling a cup of water and a tablespoon or two of honey. Add
- starter to cooled liquid. Cover and ferment using blow tube or fer-
- mentation lock. Rack two or three times to get rid of sediment.
-
- This recipe took about 6-1/2 months from brewing to bottling. First
- rack took place 15 days after brewing. 2nd rack 3 weeks later. 3rd
- rack 3 months later. Gelatin added 1 month later. Bottled about 2-
- 1/2 months later. Yield 3.7 gallons.
-
- Comments:
-
- Sweet, smooth, potent. A dessert wine. This is perhaps the best of my
- 20 or more batches of mead.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 146
-
-
-
-
- Roses for Arthur
-
- Author: Ye Olde Batte (mhalley%mun.BITNET)
- Digest: November 31, 1988
-
- Ingredients:
- rose petals
- water
- sugar
- dry yeast
-
- Procedure:
-
- Fill a glass container with rose petals. Cover with water and let
- set, covered by a clean cloth, for 3 days. Strain water through a
- cloth and measure. Add to it, one quarter of its volume of white
- sugar. Set in a glass jar or crock, add a pinch of dry yeast and stir
- well. When it is sparkling (3 days to a week), put into beer or cham-
- pagne bottles and cap. Age 1-6 months.
-
- Comments:
-
- This recipe comes from a booklet called The Delicious Rose by
- Geraldine Duncann. It was called Rose Melemell, although it has no
- honey. This is an effervescent brew with a hint of summer roses.
-
- Method: N/A
- Original Gravity: N/A
- Final Gravity: N/A
- Primary Ferment: N/A
- Secondary Ferment: N/A
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 147
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX A: BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
-
- The following books are generally available from the Association of
- Brewers at (303) 447-0816. Quite a few may also be available from
- various homebrew shops or mail order sources.
-
-
- Beach, David. Homegrown Hops. 1988, David Beach, 103 pages.
-
- A complete guide on growing hops geared toward the homebrewer. Covers
- everything from hop selection and cultivation through harvesting and
- drying.
-
-
- Burch, Byron. Brewing Quality Beers. 1986, 50 pages.
-
- This is a good, basic text on homebrewing geared toward the beginner.
-
-
- Eckhardt, Fred. Essentials of Beer Style. 1989, Fred Eckhardt
- Associates, Portland Oregon, 224 pages.
-
- Parts of this book are rehash of material covered better elsewhere,
- such as the basic brewing process and how to serve beer, but the sec-
- tions that describe the characteristics that define beer styles have
- more than enough value to justify buying this book. If you have ever
- wondered what exactly makes a porter a porter rather than a stout, or
- what the difference is between a Vienna-style lager and a Maerzen
- beer, then this book is for you.
-
-
- Fix, George. Principles of Brewing Science. 1989, Brewers Publica-
- tions, Boulder Colorado, 246 pages.
-
- This is an interesting book for the advanced brewer with some back-
- ground in chemistry, but would have little value to the beginner.
- Describes chemical process that take place in the fermentation pro-
- cess, water chemistry, proteins, enzymes, carbohydrates, etc.
-
-
- Foster, Terry. Pale Ale. 1990, Brewers Publications, Boulder
- Colorado, 134 pages.
-
- Largely geared toward the consumer who wants a knowledge of the his-
- tory, evolution, culture, and techniques that make pale ale such a
- revered style in Britain. Some sections describe the ingredients and
- procedures for making pale ales.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 148
-
-
-
-
- Gayre, Lt. Col. Robert. Brewing Mead. 1986, Brewers Publications,
- Boulder Colorado, 200 pages.
-
- Most of this book is a historical look at the place of mead in his-
- tory. Not a great deal of practical information, but interesting.
-
-
- Guinard, Jean-Xavier. Lambic. Brewers Publications, Boulder
- Colorado, 169 pages.
-
- Discussion of the history and evolution of lambic ales, includes
- directory of breweries making lambic ales and recipes for homebrewers.
-
-
- Hough, J.S., D.E. Briggs, R. Stevens, and T.W. Young. Malting and
- Brewing Science. 1982, Chapman and Hall Publishing, 914 pages.
-
- Two-volumes detailing every step in the brewing process, from agricul-
- tural techniques used in producing malt and barley through packaging
- and marketing. This book is geared to the commercial brewer and
- assumes a good knowledge of chemistry and microbiology.
-
-
- Jackson, Michael. Pocket Guide to Beer. 1982, 1989, 1991, Simon and
- Schuster, New York, 138 pages.
-
- Short, concise descriptions of breweries throughout the world along
- with descriptions of the beers they make and ratings (5-star scale).
- One of the few sources for original gravity and alcohol content infor-
- mation on commercial beers. Great for the traveler.
-
-
- Jackson, Michael. World Guide to Beer. 1977, 1988, Running Press,
- Philadelphia, 255 pages.
-
- Probably the single most important book on beer available today.
- Accurate and complete. Describes the history, culture, and techniques
- used in the beer industry throughout the world. Describes styles of
- beer that predominate in various geographic areas along with their
- heritage and commercial examples.
-
-
- Leistad, Roger. Yeast Culturing for the Homebrewer. 1983, G.W. Kent
- Co., 40 pages.
-
- Short, but detailed discussion of how yeast can be cultured. Probably
- not of interest to the beginner.
-
-
- Line, Dave. Brewing Beers Like Those You Buy.
-
- A somewhat dated text from Britain that tries to emulate such note-
- worthy commercial beers as Mackeson Triple Stout. Some of the recipes
- can try your patience as you try to figure out what "treacle" is or
- whether you should really brew with saccharine.
-
-
- 149
-
-
-
-
- Mares, William. Making Beer. 1988, Alfred Knopf Publishing Co., New
- York, 178 pages.
-
- Invaluable for its advice on why not to become a commercial brewer,
- this is a fascinating look at one homebrewer's life of beer. Witty
- and insightful descriptions of such wondrous homebrewing experiences
- as bottles bursting in the middle of the night.
-
-
- Master Brewers Association. The Practical Brewer. 1977, Master Brew-
- ers Association of the Americas, 475 pages.
-
- Advanced, comprehensive text covering various aspects of brewing.
- Geared toward the commercial brewer, but much of the information is
- useful to homebrewers as well.
-
-
- Miller, David. The Complete Handbook of Homebrewing. 1988, Garden
- Way Publishing, Pownall Vermont, 248 pages.
-
- Comprehensive homebrewing text that is often preferred by more
- advanced brewers because it is somewhat more technical and detailed
- than Papazian and better organized with a comprehensive index.
-
-
- Miller, David. Continental Pilsner. 1990, Brewers Publications,
- Boulder Colorado, 102 pages.
-
- Story of pilsner and similar lagers, explored through its history and
- evolution. Describes how to brew pale lagers at home.
-
-
- Moore, William. Home Beermaking. 72 pages.
- Good basic homebrewing text---for the beginner.
-
-
- Morse, Roger A. Making Mead---History, Recipes, Methods, and Equip-
- ment. 1980, Wicwas Press, 127 pages.
-
- In-depth look at brewing techniques, troubleshooting, and analysis of
- mead. Written by beekeeper and horticulturist.
-
-
- Noonan, Greg. Brewing Lager Beer. 1986, Brewers Publications, Boul-
- der Colorado, 293 pages.
-
- Somewhat advanced text geared to the advanced brewer who wants to try
- bottom-fermented beers. A must if you want to try a decoction mash.
- Excellent discussion of water treatment and quality by geographic
- area.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 150
-
-
-
-
- Papazian, Charlie. The Complete Joy of Home Brewing. 1984, Avon
- Books, New York, 352 pages.
-
- The most universally accepted reference among homebrewers. Excellent
- selection of recipes. Good choice as a general text, especially if
- you can only afford one. This book will hold your hand as you begin
- brewing and will take you gradually through progressively more diffi-
- cult steps. Desperately cries out for an index.
-
-
- Priest, F.G. and I. Campbell. Brewing Microbiology. 1987, Elsevier
- Science Publishers, Amsterdam.
-
-
- Reese, M.R. Better Beer and How to Brew It. 1981, Garden Way Pub-
- lishing, Pownall Vermont.
-
-
- Zymurgy. Magazine of the American Homebrewers Association, Boulder
- Colorado.
-
- Quarterly magazine covering all aspects of homebrewing. The annual
- special issues alone are worth the cost of the subscription. Past
- topics have included troubleshooting, hops, and yeast.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 151
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX B: SUPPLIERS
-
-
-
- The following list of suppliers was compiled by Chris Shenton
- (chris@asylum.gsfc.nasa.gov) and originally appeared in the Homebrew
- Digest Feb 16, 1990. We extend our heartiest thanks to Chris for the
- effort he put into this list. According to Chris, there was once an
- updated list, but one hungry tape later, and all his work was gone.
- Fortunately the following work has been saved in the archives for all
- to enjoy.
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- The following lists unit prices for a sample of supplies from a number
- of vendors. These are only representative data points on some of the
- more common items and should help in deciding where to shop. Some
- vendors sell in small quantities, and some only in large quantities,
- but give bulk prices. Consult the notes following the table for ad-
- dresses and information about quantities. Please send me any other
- vendors you have information about so I can keep this list current.
- Thanks for your support.---Chris Shenton
-
- SELECTION PHILOSOPHY
-
- I didn't include most specialty grains (or specialty items) because
- they are ordered in small quantities. Prices selected are for low-
- est-cost variety available; for example, if US and German Munich malt
- is available, I quote the cheaper US variety. When price or amount
- depends on quantity ordered, I've tried to select an amount suitable
- for a couple of batches, because that's the way I would order by mail.
- For example, if there are 1, 5, 10, 20, 50 Lb bags of grain, I used
- the 20 Lb price because that seems like a realistic purchase quantity
- --- enough for about two batches. Likewise, if there's a 6-can dis-
- count on a case of extract, I quote that price, rather than the higher
- per-can price. With hops, same deal: if there were 1, 2, 5, 10 oz
- packs, I'd quote the 5 oz pack price.
-
- OTHER SUPPLIERS
-
- There are a couple suppliers which do not fit in the chart because
- they specialize in only one item, or sell somewhat unusual items.
- They are included separately from the chart and its addresses.
- (Freshops is force-fit into the chart below, however).
-
- PERUSAL
-
- My guinea pig said he found the raw data too overwhelming and would
- prefer a more iconic style. Therefore, I've taken my numbers (price
- per quantity), and broken things into intervals, then marked them
- using the familiar $, $$, $$$, $$$$ notation. Then, for each suppli-
- er, I averaged the interval-measure of each available ingredient to
- get an average value for all that supplier's merchandise. Presented
- in an iconic form at the extreme right, this shows at a glance which
- dealers are expensive (e.g.: Wine & Brew By You) and which are cheap
-
-
- 152
-
-
-
-
- (e.g.: Green Acres and Brew For Less [I would hope so with a name like
- that! :-]). Note that this ignores unavailable ingredients, and
- therefore variety/selection; companies with only a couple inexpensive
- items (e.g.: Freshops) come out looking good, too. After the body of
- the chart, I list the minimum, average, and maximum prices for the
- items, in dollars per the quantity-measure specified in the column
- heading.
-
- FEEDBACK
-
- I would be willing to maintain a list of user reports for each vendor.
- Send me any comments on ones you have dealt with: price, knowledge,
- quality, freshness, turn-around time, etc. I'll compile and send out
- updates every now and then. If you have other vendors I didn't in-
- clude, send me a line or two with the prices calculated for the ingre-
- dients in this table. (I can't afford to keep current on all the deal-
- ers!)
-
- DISCLAIMER
-
- Some suppliers will have inevitably been omitted. These include
- places with no catalog (eg. Col. John's), places which charge for
- catalogs (eg: Brass Corkscrew / Brewer's Warehouse), and places I am
- not aware of. I apologize for any omissions.
-
- (The obligatory null-statement indicating my opinions are no one
- else's.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 153
-
-
-
-
- SUPPLIERS COMPARISON CHART
-
- Comp Extract $/Lb Malt $/Lb Hops $/oz Yeast $/pk
- any St --------- --------- ---- ---- Soda
- Abbr at Edme M&F Dry Klag Pale Crys Muni Casc Saaz Liqu Whit Caps
- ev. e Bulk DMS Plai Ligh es tal ch Flwr Pell Cult Dry $/gr
- ==== == ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ====
- AmBr NC $$$ ____ ____ ____ $ $ $$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ ____ ____ | $$
- AmWo PA ____ $ $$ $$ $$$$ $$$$ $$$$ ____ ____ $$$ ____ ____ $$$$ | $$$
- BAWH MA ____ $ $$ $$ $$$ $$ $$ $$$ $$ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$ | $$
- BBM WI $$ ____ $ $ $ $$ $ $ $$ $$ $ ____ $ | $$
- BFL IL $ $ $ $ $ $ $ ____ $$ $ $ ____ $$ | $
- BM&V MA ____ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$$ $$$ | $$
- BrHa TN $$$ $$ $$ $$ $ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $ ____ $ | $$
- CW PA $$$ $$ $$ $$ $$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$$ ____ $$$ $$$ | $$
- Cell WA $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ ____ $$ $$ $ $$ $$ ____ $$$$ | $$
- Cros CT ____ $$ $$ $$ ____ $$$ $$$ $$$ $$ $$ $$$$ $$$ $$$ | $$$
- ECK MO ____ ____ $$ $$ ____ $$$ $$$ ____ $ $$ ____ ____ $$$$ | $$
- FH OR ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ $ ____ $ ____ ____ | $
- FHSC OR $ $ $$ $ $ $ $ $ $$ $$$ $ ____ ____ | $
- GFM CA $$ $$ $$ $$ $ $$ $$ $$ $ $$ $ $$$$ $$$ | $$
- GFSR CA $$$ $$$ $$ $$ $ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $ $$$$ $$$ | $$
- GrAc MN $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ ____ $$ | $
- HBII FL $$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$$ $$$ $$ $$$ ____ ____ $ | $$
- HHS PA ____ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ ____ ____ $$ | $$
- HSH PA ____ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $ $$ ____ ____ $$$ | $$
- Henn NY $$$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$$ $$$ | $$
- JHBS NH ____ $$ $$ $$ $$$ $$$ $$$ $$$ $$ $ ____ $ $$ | $$
- Joe OH ____ $$ $$ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ ____ ____ $$ | $$
- KMB IL ____ ____ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$$$ $$ ____ ____ $ | $$
- LOWS IL ____ $ $ $ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ $ ____ ____ $ | $
- MMHS OK ____ ____ ____ $$ $$ ____ $$ $$ $$ $$ ____ ____ $ | $$
- Mark OH ____ ____ $ $ $$ $$ $ $ ____ $ ____ ____ $ | $
- Maye NY ____ $$ $$ $ $$ $$ $$ $$ $ $$ $ ____ $$$ | $$
- OBW CA $$ ____ ____ $ ____ $ $ $$$ ____ $ ____ ____ $$$ | $$
- PF WI ____ $$ $$ $$ $$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $ ____ ____ $$$ | $$
- S&R NY ____ $ $$ $ $$ $$ $$ $$ $ $$ ____ ____ $$$ | $$
- SBS FL ____ ____ $$ $$ ____ $$$ $$$ $$$ $$ $$ $$ ____ $$ | $$
- THB CA ____ $$ $$ $ $ $$$ $$$ $$$ $$ $$ $ ____ $$$ | $$
- TMBC MA ____ $$ $$ $$ ____ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $ $$$ $$$ | $$
- WBBY FL ____ $$$$ $$$$ $$$$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$ $$$$ $$$ $$$$ ____ ____ $$$ | $$$$
- WM MO ____ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $ $ $ ____ ____ $ | $$
- WiBr CA $$$$ ____ ____ $$ $$$ $$$ $$$ $$$ $ $ $$ ____ $$$ | $$
- Min == 1.11 1.82 1.50 1.81 0.60 0.70 0.70 0.65 0.48 0.83 3.25 1.40 0.85
- Avg == 1.58 2.47 2.32 2.60 1.01 1.15 1.17 1.11 0.81 1.37 3.81 1.87 1.37
- Max == 2.08 4.28 4.54 5.00 1.75 1.90 1.90 1.90 1.85 2.49 5.45 2.10 1.99
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 154
-
-
-
-
- ADDRESSES AND COMMENTS
-
- Note:
- `$' indicates quantity used for the quoted price below,
- `_' indicates not available or information not given
-
- AmBr American Brewmaster
- 2940-6 Trawick Road
- Raleigh, NC 27604
- 919-850-0095
-
- Extract:
- American Classic malt in 1.65# and 3.3# $ boilable pouches
- Malt: Klages/Pale 1#, 3#, 25# $, 50#; Crystal and Munich 1# $
- Hop Flower: 2oz $, 1#, 2#, 4#
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $, 1#, 2#, 4#
- Discounts: %5 @ 13.2# $, 10% @ 26.4# extract & applies to other
- thing's too!
- Comments: Yeast culturing supplies; good discounts; quality malt
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: Fast service, knowledgeable staff.
-
-
- AmWo Ambler Woodstove
- Bethelehem and Butler Pikes
- Ambler, PA 19002
- 215-643-3565
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F 1# $
- Malt: 1# $ amounts
- Hop Flower: _
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: Malt --- 10% 10-25#, 25% for 55#; Hops discounted for 8oz
- Comments: Brewing is not their main business; limited selection.
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- BAWH Beer and Wine Hobby
- PO Box 3104
- Wakefield, MA 01880
- 617-933-8818
-
- Extract: Dry 1#, 3# $, 55#; 1 can, 6 can case $
- Malt: 1#, 5#, 10#, 55#
- Hop Flower: 4oz $, 8oz, 1#
- Hop Pellets: 1oz
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Good selection beer and wine; yeast propagation kit, keg
- system
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
- 155
-
-
-
-
- BBM Basement Brewmaster
- 4280 N. 160th St
- Brookfield, WI 53005
- 414-781-BREW
-
- Extract: Bulk is 3# $ heat-sealed bags of Wisconsin extract
- Malt: 1# $
- Hop Flower: 4oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: New company, not a large selection yet
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- BFL Brew for Less
- P.O. Box 32 195
- Chicago, IL 60632-0195
- 312-581-BEER
-
- Extract: Bulk is M&F 55# $; Edme 2# $; M&F 3.3# $; M&F dry 3# $
- Malt: M&F 2-row in 5#, 20# $, 55#
- Hop Flower: 0.5# $ and 1.0# bags
- Hop Pellets: 0.25# $ and 1.0# bags
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Decent selection
- P & H: UPS extra, Handling $1
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- BM&V Barleymalt & Vine
- 4 Corey St
- W. Roxbury, MA 02132
- 617-327-0089
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F 3# $
- Malt: 1#, 10# $, 55#
- Hop Flower: 4oz $, 1#
- Hop Pellets: 1oz, 4oz $, 1#
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Cornelius system for $179!, kegs for $25!; fairly comp-
- lete
- P & H: Free for orders more than $30
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 156
-
-
-
-
- BrHa Brewhaus
- 4955 Ball Camp Pike
- Knoxville, TN 37921
- 615-523-4615
-
- Extract: Bulk is M&F 55# $; Dry is Laaglander 3# $, 55#, M&F 3,
- 55#
- Malt: Klages 1# $, 55#; others in 50# bags
- Hop Flower: 1oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $, 1#
- Discounts: 10% case extract
- Comments: Solid catalog; wide selection; Klages 55# bag for $0.55/#!
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: Knowledgeable staff, reasonably fast turnaround. Good
- prices.
-
-
- CW Country Wines
- 3333 Babcock Blvd
- Pittsburgh, PA 15237
- 412-366-0151
-
- Extract: Bulk is EDME 55# $ DMS or SFX; dry: M&F 1#, 3# $, 55#
- Malt: _
- Hop Flower: 2oz, 4oz $
- Hop Pellets: 10 g, 1oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Good wine selection
- P & H: UPS extra; handling $1 on orders < $8
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- Cell The Cellar
- P.O. Box 33525
- 14411 Greenwood Ave, N.
- Seattle, WA 98133
- 206-365-7660
-
- Extract: 1 can, 6 can case $; Bulk is 58# $ Alexanders
- Malt: 3# $, 55#
- Hop Flower: 2oz $, 1#
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $, 1#
- Discounts: Extract cans 10% case discount
- Comments: Good selection, lots of equipment and other toys
- P & H: UPS extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 157
-
-
-
-
- Cros Crossfire
- PO Box 530
- Somersville, CT 06072
- 203-623-6537
-
- Extract: 1 can, 6 can case $; 1#, 3# $, 55#
- Malt: 1# $, 55#
- Hop Flower: 1oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: extract can case above
- Comments: Good selection of wine and beer
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- ECK E.C. Kraus
- 9001 East 24 Highway
- P.O. Box 7850
- Independence, MO 64053
- 816-254-7448
-
- Extract: 4 3.3# cans $
- Malt: 10 1# bags $
- Hop Flower: 4oz $
- Hop Pellets: 3oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Mostly wine (though not extensive), not much beer
- P & H: $0.75 handling, most items postpaid
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- FH Freshops
- 36180 Kings Valley Hwy
- Philomath, OR 97370
- 503-929-2736
-
- Extract: _
- Malt: _
- Hop Flower: 4oz, 8oz $, 12oz, 1#, 2#, 3#, 4#, 5-10#,11+#
- Hop Pellets: _
- Discounts: based on quantity
- Comments: Rhizomes! N. Brewer, Chinook, Willamette, Perle, CFJ90,
- Hallertauer, Tettnanger
- P & H: included
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 158
-
-
-
-
- FHSC F.H. Steinbart Co
- 602 SE Salmon
- Portland, OR 97214
- 503-232-8793
-
- Extract: Bulk 7# $; Dry is domestic 5# $, 55#
- Malt: 1#, 10#, 25# $, 50#, 80# at various discounts
- Hop Flower: 2oz $, 1#
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $, 1#
- Discounts: Extract case discount
- Comments: Good wine selection too; lots of variety.
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- GFM Great Fermentations of Marin
- 87 Larkspur St
- San Rafael, CA 94901
- 415-459-2420
-
- Extract: Bulk 1# $; Dry 5# $, 55#
- Malt: 1#, 5# $
- Hop Flower: 4oz $
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Complete: hop rhizomes! 7gal carboys, kegging, lots of
- books
- P & H: handling $1 ($3 for orders < $20); postage extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- GFSR Great Fermentations of Santa Rosa
- PO Box 428
- Fulton, CA
- 800-544-1867
-
- Extract: Bulk generic, and the usual cans
- Malt: 1# $; Munich is US --- German available
- Hop Flower: 4oz $; Cascade and Northern Brewer
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $; domestic @ $1.95, imported @ $2.95
- Discounts: order > $100 10%, > $250 25%
- Comments: Very well produced catalog, descriptive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 159
-
-
-
-
- GrAc Green Acres
- 216 Vork Rd
- Esko, MN 55733
- 218-879-2465
-
- Extract: Bulk is Breiss unhopped (5 gal, 58# pail) for $72
- Malt: 1#, 4#, 20# $, 50#, 55#
- Hop Flower: 1oz, 2oz, 4oz $, 8oz, 1#
- Hop Pellets: 1oz, 2oz, 4oz $, 8oz, 1#
- Discounts: per ingredient, varies
- Comments: Selection not extensive but they have all the essentials
- P & H: UPS extra; Handling --- order <$25 $3, <$50 $1, >$50 $none
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- HBII Home Brew Intl, Inc
- 1126 S. Federal Hwy
- Suite 182
- Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33316
- 305-764-1527
-
- Extract: Bulk is M&F 55# $; Dry is M&F 1#, 3# $, 55#
- Malt: Klages and Pale 1#, 55# $; others 1# $, 55#
- Hop Flower: 4oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $, 1#
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Good selection beer/wine; kegging; cheese, sourdough, et al
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: Slow service (still waiting --- about 3 weeks)
-
-
- HHS Hayes Homebrew Supply
- Suite 117
- 311 S. Allen St
- State College, PA 16801
-
- Extract: Dry is Laaglander 3.0# $
- Malt: Klages 1#, 5# $, 50#; others 1#, 5# $; pale is English
- Hop Flower: 1oz, 2oz, 4oz $, 1#
- Hop Pellets: 1oz, 2oz, 4oz $, 1#
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Decent selection of the basics
- P & H: Handling $1.50 for orders < $20; postage extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 160
-
-
-
-
- HSW Home Sweet Homebrew
- 2008 Sansom St
- Philadelphia, PA 19103
- 215-569-9469
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F 3# $
- Malt: Klages and Pale 1#, 5# $, 50#; others 1#, 5#
- Hop Flower: 2oz $, 1#
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $, 1#
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Reasonable selection
- P & H: Handling $2 for orders <$15; postage extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- Henn Hennessy Homebrew
- 470 North Greenbush Road
- Rensselaer, NY 12144
- 518-283-7094
-
- Extract: Bulk is 55# $ dry M&F; Diastatic is by M&F, not Edme
- Malt: 1#, 5# $, 50#
- Hop Flower: 4oz $
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Fairly good selection of beer and wine
- P & H: Handling $1.50; postage included for states northeast US
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- JHBS Jaspers Home Brew Supply
- 116 Page Road
- Litchfield, NH 03051
- 603-881-3052
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F, 1#, 3# $, 6#, 12#
- Malt: 1# $
- Hop Flower: 1oz $, 1#
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $, 1#
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Limited selection
- P & H: $7.50 (unless paying by VISA), excess refunded; >$50 UPS split
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 161
-
-
-
-
- Joe Joe and Sons
- P.O. Box 11276
- Cincinnati, OH 45211
- 513-662-2326
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F 3# $
- Malt: 1# $
- Hop Flower: 1oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Mostly wine, reasonably extensive
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- KMB Koeppl's Master Brewing
- 2311 George St
- Rolling Meadows, IL 60008
- 312-255-4478
-
- Extract: _
- Malt: 1#, 5# $
- Hop Flower: 2oz $ (price doesn't seem right)
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Large selection, very good draft component/system selection
- P & H: handling $1.50 for orders < $10; postage extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- LOWS Lil' Olde Winemaking Shoppe
- 4S245 Wiltshire Ln
- Sugar Grove, IL 60554
- 708-557-2523
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F 3# $
- Malt: _
- Hop Flower: _
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Large extract selection, but limited otherwise
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 162
-
-
-
-
- MMHS Marbull's Malt & Hop Shop
- 709 Highland
- Lawton, OK 73501
- 405-355-6690
-
- Extract: Dry 3# $
- Malt: 1# $
- Hop Flower: 1oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Did not give quantity for caps; small selection
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- Mark Mark's Malts
- 14 Tonkin Ct
- Kent, OH 44240
-
- Extract: 1 can, 6 can case $; dry is M&F 3# $
- Malt: 1#, 15# $, 35#, 50#
- Hop Flower: _
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: Hops 10% @ 8oz
- Comments: Not a large selection
- P & H: postage extra; $1.50 extra for orders under $20
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- Maye Mayer's
- 699 Five Mile Line Rd
- Webster, NY 14580
- 800-543-0043
-
- Extract: Dry is Telford's 1#, 3# $, 56#
- Malt: 1#, 5# $, 55#, 110#
- Hop Flower: 1oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Reasonable beer/wine selection
- P & H: $2 when weight >25#; postage extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- 163
-
-
-
-
- OBW Oak Barrel Winecraft
- 1443 San Pablo Ave
- Berkeley, CA 94702
- 415-849-0400
-
- Extract: Bulk syrup 0-5, 6-10 11-20# $, 21-40, 41-60; dry 3, 6# $,
- 44
- Malt: 3#, 7# $, 50#
- Hop Flower: Flower/Pellet not specified --- only pellets assumed
- Hop Pellets: 2oz, 4oz $, 1#, 5#
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Somewhat chaotic catalog, not very complete
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- PF Purple Foot
- 3167 S. 92nd St
- Milwaukee, WI 53227
- 414-327-2130
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F 3# $
- Malt: 1# $
- Hop Flower: 1.5oz $
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Decent selection
- P & H: postage/UPS extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- S&R S & R Homebrewing & Winemaking Supplies
- P.O. Box 544
- Union Station
- Endicott, NY 13760
- 607-748-1877
-
- Extract: Dry 3# $ bags
- Malt: 1--10#, 11--20# $, 21+# bags
- Hop Flower: 2oz $
- Hop Pellets: 4oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Decent though not mind-blowing selection of beer, wine
- P & H: postage extra; $1 handling for orders < $10
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 164
-
-
-
-
- SBS Sebastian Brewers Supply
- 1762 Sunrise Lane
- Sebastian, FL 32958
-
- Extract: 1 can, 6 can case $;
- Malt: 1#, 5+# $
- Hop Flower: 1oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: 10% for 5 hops, and extract/malt given above
- Comments: Good selection; keg system for $200
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
- THB The Home Brewery
- 16490 Jurupa Ave
- Fontana, CA 92335
- 714-822-3010
-
- Extract: Dry is Brewmaster 3# $; also Telford's, Laaglander
- Malt: Klages 1#, 10# $, 50#; others 1#, 5# $
- Hop Flower: 2oz $
- Hop Pellets: 2oz $
- Discounts: 10% on 6 or more cans extract
- Comments: Good selection
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- TMBC The Modern Brewer Company
- P.O. Box 511
- Cambridge, MA 02140
- 800-SEND-ALE
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F 1#, 3# $
- Malt: 1#, 10# $, 55#
- Hop Flower: 1oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Beer selection is fairly complete.
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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- 165
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-
-
- WBBY Wine & Brew By You
- 5760 Bird Rd
- Miami, FL 33155
- 305-666-5757
-
- Extract: Dry is M&F 3# $
- Malt: Klages is `Brewer's Pale' 10# $; others 1#, 5# $
- Hop Flower: 1oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Used kegs $23, float conversions $3
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- WM Winemaker's Market
- 4249 N. Essex Ave
- Springfield, MO 65803
- 417-833-4145
-
- Extract: Dry is 3# $ M&F
- Malt: 1#, 10# $
- Hop Flower: 1oz, 8oz $
- Hop Pellets: 1oz, 8oz $
- Discounts: _
- Comments: Good beer/wine selection (except yeasts)
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
- WiBr William's Brewing
- 14310 Wicks Blvd
- P.O. Box 2195
- San Leandro, CA 94577
- 415-895-2739
-
- Extract: Bulk in variety of styles in 6# $ boilable bags; Dry 5#
- $, 55#
- Malt: Klages and English Pale, 1#, 50# $; others 1# $9
- Hop Flower: 6oz $
- Hop Pellets: 2oz, 6oz $
- Discounts: Available on extract
- Comments: Very informative catalog, good selection
- P & H: extra
- Use Note: ??
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 166
-
-
-
-
-
- ADDRESSES AND DESCRIPTIONS OF OTHER SUPPLIERS
-
-
- Hauge Enterprises
- P.O. Box 17170
- Portland, OR 97217
-
- Brewing equipment and gadgets. Gas burner, wort chiller, stainless
- brewpot (5 gal), copper siphon tube, sparge water sprayer.
-
-
- Brew Co
- P.O. Box 1063
- Boon, NC 28607
-
- Brewing gadgets. Bru Heat, BrewCap, improved sparge bag, brew chiller
- (modified counterflow).
-
-
- Braukunst
- 55 Lakeview Drive
- Carlton, MN 55718
-
- Kegging and tapping using systems using soda kegs. Complete system:
- $250; includes 5 gallon Cornelius keg, 5# CO2 tank, two-gauge regula-
- tor, fridge-mounted faucet, drip pan, hoses and connectors.
-
-
- Foxx
- 421 Southwest Blvd
- Kansas City, MO
- 800-821-2254.
-
- Kegging system: $152; includes 5 gallon Cornelius keg, 1 gauge regula-
- tor, CO2 tank, hoses, connectors, picnic tap. Two gauge regulator: add
- $6. All they sell is beer and soda kegging stuff, and they know what
- they sell. Extensive catalog.
-
-
- Rapids Inc
- 1011 2nd Ave SW
- P.O. Box 396
- Cedar Rapids, IA 52406
- 800-553-7906.
-
- Restaurant wholesale equipment. Most interesting: 10 gal 20 gauge
- stainless pot: $80; matching lid: $20. The pot is quality, and it's
- a good company with which to do business.
-
-
-
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-
-
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- 167
-
-
-
-
- Stew's Brew
- R.R. 4 Box 243
- River Falls, WI 54022
- 715-425-2525
-
- Sells only malt ("various strains blended to a brewmaster specs").
- His prices are very good, and one user (John Freeman, aka
- jlf@earth.cray.com) said it was of high quality. Stew has an informa-
- tive (lots of low-cost technique and speed-up tips) and somewhat odd
- `catalog'. Prices are 32# @ $0.55/Lb; discounts are 5% on 2-3 68 Lb
- parcels, 10% on 4+ 68 Lb parcels. Postage extra.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
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-
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-
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- 168
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX C: BEGINNERS GUIDE
-
-
-
- I hope that the following guide can help some beginners with their
- first batches. I obviously can't cover every little detail of home-
- brewing here, but I have tried to give an easily followed outline of
- the process, along with most of the common pitfalls faced by begin-
- ners. I would welcome any comments or criticism on this section, as
- it will probably appear again, in hopefully better form.
- -Rob Gardner, Digest Coordinator
-
- 1. The first thing I recommend to the new brewer is to find a source
- of brewing supplies. It may be a local brew shop or a mail order
- store. Check out books on homebrew either at a library or bookstore.
- The book I recommend getting is Charlie Papazian's "Complete Joy of
- Homebrewing." This is easily one of the best homebrewing books around,
- and it is very useful for both beginners and experienced brewers.
- There are lots of other good books around, so don't worry if you can't
- find this one. One caveat: stay away from books published in the UK,
- as these can be confusing and/or misleading for the beginner. They
- specify ingredients that aren't found in the US, and generally give
- poor advice, like adding lots of sugar.
-
- 2. The next thing to do is buy a kit. Most brew stores sell kits
- that contain everything you need to make your first batch, except for
- bottles. They'll cost anywhere from $35-$60 depending on how fancy
- they are. I'd recommend getting a kit that includes a 5 gallon glass
- carboy as well as a plastic pail. Other useful items that the kit
- might not include are thermometer and hydrometer. The kit should
- include: 10 gallon plastic pail, siphon equipment, bottle filler,
- bottle brush, bottle caps, bottle capper, fermentation lock, chlorine
- cleaner, and perhaps ingredients. If the kit includes a carboy, it
- should also include a short length of plastic hose for the "blow-by,"
- and a funnel. There might be some other odd items, such as a stirring
- spoon. The major difference between one kit and another will be the
- presence of a glass carboy, so in this article I will indicate when a
- difference in technique is called for. If the kit does not include
- ingredients, there are usually several kinds of malt extract to choose
- from. Try to pick something not too heavy for the first time; a light
- or amber ale is a very good choice. Also try to get a hopped malt
- extract the first time to keep it simple. If none is available, then
- get 2 ounces of fresh hops if available. Failing that, get 2 ounces
- of hop pellets.
-
- 3. Relax, don't worry, and have a homebrew. Now you are about ready
- to start brewing. If possible, it is extraordinarily helpful at this
- point to find somebody who's done it before, and have them help you.
- Doing this will greatly improve your chances of success the first
- time, but don't worry if you can't swing it, your chances are still
- pretty good. Remember to tell yourself, "Relax, don't worry, and have
- a homebrew." The first time, ordinary beer will have to do, but do
- try to drink homebrew whenever you brew---it will help you to not
- worry. (Worrying can ruin the taste of your homebrew.)
-
-
-
- 169
-
-
-
-
- 4. To begin, you'll need a large pot to boil the malt extract in. The
- pot should be large enough to hold at least 2 gallons of water---the
- bigger the better. Fill the pot up about half way (whatever that
- happens to be) with water and boil it. The idea is to boil as much
- water as possible, but to have room in the pot for foam that will be
- produced by boiling. While the water is heating up, remove the label
- from the can(s) of malt extract, and put the can(s) in some hot water
- to soften the extract. When the water boils, put in the extract and
- let it boil again, stirring frequently so the extract doesn't burn.
- When it comes to a second boil, watch out---it has a strong tendency
- to foam up and make a legendary mess on your stove. When the foam
- rises, remove the pot from the fire and let it settle down a minute.
- When you put it back, it will have (slightly) less tendency to boil
- over, but it needs watching.
-
- 5. If you have hops or hop pellets, add them now, and boil the wort
- (wort == unfermented beer) for at least a half hour (an hour is bet-
- ter.) If you're not using hops, but instead, hopped malt extract, then
- it is not necessary to boil very long---15 minutes is sufficient.
-
- 6. While the wort is boiling, you should sanitize everything that
- will come in contact with the beer. This includes the fermentation
- container, fermentation lock, utensils, everything. Sanitizing is
- done by soaking in a solution of water and the sanitizing chemical
- that came with your kit. A few teaspoons of household bleach in a
- gallon of water is quite effective also. I generally fill a large
- bowl with bleach solution and throw in everything to be sanitized.
- After sanitizing, rinse well with clean water at least 3 times. No-
- tice I keep saying "sanitize" and not "sterilize." Well, it would be
- nice if you could sterilize, but you can't. Sterilization is very
- difficult, i.e., boiling under pressure for an hour, so sanitizing is
- the best we can do. Needless to say, be careful not to breath the
- fumes or get any sanitizing solution in your eyes. Sanitizing might
- sound like a pain, but that's only because it is. However, it's abso-
- lutely the most important thing you can do to make your beer a suc-
- cess. You can screw up a dozen other things, but if you keep every-
- thing clean, you'll still liable to brew a good beer. But if you're
- not sanitary, the finest ingredients and techniques won't help -
- you'll brew quite undrinkable beer.
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- 7. Now put about 2 gallons of cold water into your fermenter, and add
- the boiled wort. A funnel is handy at this point if you are using a
- carboy. If your boiling pot is very large, use less than 2 gallons---
- remember, we're eventually making 5 gallons. (Do not pour the hot
- wort directly into a carboy without cold water in it---you are likely
- to crack the glass!) If you added hops, you'll want to use a strainer
- to remove them, but don't worry if you don't get them all. Now fill
- your fermenter up to 5 gallons with cold water. If you're using the
- plastic pail, it helps if you've previously marked where 5 gallons
- occurs---a magic marker works well. If you're using a carboy, fill it
- up to several inches from the top. Depending on how much water you
- boiled, the temperature of the wort might be too high to add the
- yeast. If so, let it cool until it is below 90 degrees F.
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- 8. Now the packet of yeast may be added to the wort. If you like,
- you can "start" the yeast. I usually do this to give it a "running
- start" and also simply to be sure that the yeast is good. To start
- the yeast, sanitize a bottle, and mix 2 teaspoons of corn sugar with a
- half cup of 80 degree water, and add the yeast. Stick a fermentation
- lock on top and let it sit while the wort cools. By the time the wort
- is cooled, the yeast starter should be busy fermenting, and you should
- see bubbles percolating through the fermentation lock. Now just dump
- the yeast mixture into the wort. If you're using a carboy, be careful
- when filling it with water to leave room in it for the yeast mixture.
-
- 9. After the yeast is added, put the lid on the plastic fermenter and
- attach the fermentation lock. Don't forget to put some water in the
- lock. If you're using a carboy, force the short piece of plastic
- tubing through the stopper a little bit, and put it on the carboy.
- Place the other end of the tube in a bucket of water. This type of
- fermentation lock is known as a "blow-by," and is necessary because
- the fermentation will produce lots of foam and sludge, and it has no
- place to go except out. If you used an ordinary lock, it would quick-
- ly fill up with garbage. In a plastic pail, there is plenty of space
- for the foam to grow.
-
- 10. Now put the whole thing into a cool, dark, place to let it fer-
- ment. Dark is important because sunlight can damage the beer. Cool
- is important because beer-fouling organisms don't thrive as well at
- lower temperatures. Room temperature is usually fine---about 70 de-
- grees F. If you can get it to 65 or 60, that would be better. Don't
- make it colder than 60, however, because then the yeast won't work
- very well. (Most beginners will be using top fermenting yeast, which
- works best at 60 degrees and above. Bottom fermenting yeast works
- fine all the way down to freezing.) If you can't get the temperature
- below 80, then you should look for a better place to keep your beer.
- If you are using the carboy method, check the bucket daily for over-
- flow. Signs of fermentation should appear within a couple of hours,
- and by the next morning, it should be fermenting madly.
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- 11. After a few days, it will start to slow down, and will finish
- sometime between 4 and 10 days after you began. If you are using the
- carboy and blow-by, replace the blow-by with a fermentation lock when
- it stops blowing out garbage and starts blowing only bubbles. How
- will you know when it's done fermenting? If you like, you can take
- hydrometer readings, and wait until it stabilizes (same reading on 3
- consecutive days.) However, I've found it works just as well to ob-
- serve the frequency of the bubbles in the airlock. When you watch it,
- but don't see any bubbles for a few minutes, it's quite ready to be
- bottled. When it finishes fermenting, you don't have to bottle it
- immediately, but it's best to bottle it within 3-4 weeks of beginning.
-
- 12. The first step in bottling is to acquire bottles. Go to a liquor
- store or bar and pay $2.50 for 2 cases of empty deposit bottles. Do
- not use the throwaway kind with the screw-off tops, as these are not
- strong enough. Chances are the bottles will be pretty scummy, so pour
- an inch or two of strong bleach solution into each, and let them sit
- for an hour. Then rinse them well, using your bottle brush if neces-
- sary, and your bottle washer if you have one (see issue #1.)
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- A simple time saver is to go to your favorite drinking establishment
- and find out from the barkeep when the distributor picks up the empty
- bottles and then show up the day after to pick up the cases of emp-
- ties. You will have less crud in the bottom of the bottles if you do
- this. Also ask for bottles with paper labels. Soak the bottles in a
- bleach solution and the labels will be floating in 12 to 24 hours.
- Load your dishwasher up with your bottles, turn on the sanitize set-
- ting (or `HEAT WATER'), and let run through two or three rinse cycles.
- PLEASE DO NOT USE ANY SOAP. It clings to the glass. ---Ed.
-
- 13. If you fermented your beer in a carboy, siphon(*) the beer into
- the sanitized plastic pail, and add a boiled solution of 3/4 cup corn
- sugar and water. If you used the pail to ferment, then you must
- "prime" the bottles with 1/2 to 1 teaspoon of sugar each. This added
- sugar is what produces the carbonation in the bottles. Do not use
- more than 1 cup per 5 gallons or 1 teaspoon per bottle, or you risk
- the danger (and social embarrassment) of exploding bottles.
-
- 14. Now fill the bottles with the siphon and bottle filler, and cap
- them. Store at room temperature for at least a week, then try to move
- the beer someplace a little cooler. (I keep mine underneath a
- window.) The beer should be drinkable 3 weeks after bottling, depend-
- ing on ingredients. You might want to try a bottle every week after
- bottling just to taste the changes that occur.
-
- * siphoning: don't suck on the tube to start it, that will introduce
- lots of bacteria into the beer. A good trick is to fill the siphon
- with water to start it. Remember that the level of liquid in the
- source container must be higher off the ground than the top of the
- destination container in order for the siphon to work.
-
- Now don't rush to brew the second batch quite yet. Why not wait a few
- weeks and see how the first turned out? That way, if you really did
- something wrong, you have a chance to find out what, and avoid the
- problem in the second batch.
-
- Good luck!
-
- - Rob Gardner, Somewhere in HP
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