Archive for the “recipes” Category

Recipes for brewing beer.

Last weekend was the CBA National Homebrewing Festival in Sutton – I went last year and entered four beers this year. I took along a best bitter, an ordinary bitter, my BBX Porter and my year old Mad Boris.

As a (rather unexpected) result, I picked up a second in “Mild, Porter and Stout” with the Russian Stout with lots of good feedback from guys at the festival who tried it; and to top that, a first in “Bitters up to 1040″ with my “Windrush Bitter”.

Was very chuffed with it all and had a great afternoon and chatted a lot with some other great homebrewers. I got to try my stout again at the festival for the first time in 4 months(!), and was pleasantly surprised that the bitter got first place given the standard of the competition.

Congrats to Andy Hill who picked up the overall best beer with his mild which was very good indeed.

My Windrush Bitter recipe that got first place was as follows:

3.2kg Pale male
102g Light Crystal malt
102g Crystal Malt
85g Amber Malt

Mashed at 67-68C for 60min, then boiled for 90 min as follows:

WGV 8.7% 14g, 90min
EKG 4.6% 14g, 90min
EKG 4.6% 14g 15min
EKG 14g 0min
Dry hop 4 days prior to bottling with 10g EKG.

Yeast: Wyeast 1335
“Fruity, hoppy nose. Light refreshing bitter. Long bitter finish.”

The Wy1335 is great yeast – I fermented at “about 20C” (upstairs front room) for 2 weeks and got from 1034 to 1008. It forms a thick yeasty head while fermenting, not unlike Hopback yeast, but then drops very clear quite quickly – much quicker than Nottingham (though not as quick as the Fullers strain so it will ferment out without needing rousing – though stirring back in seems useful!). I must make this beer again soon – it was only 4 weeks from brewing to the festival so it’s a quick one to get ready.

In fact I have another beer on the go (a week now) with the same yeast and it’s almost done at the moment (Pale malt, light crystal (4.5%) and (2.3% each of) light chocolate and roast barley; touch of sugar; Fuggles, Goldings, Boadicea and Challenger, with Goldings for flavour and aroma.). It’s down to 1013 from 1037 – another couple of points in the next few days and it’s done and ready to be racked – though the ferment was explosive at the start and had piles of yeast being thrown out of the fermenter via the airlock after just 36 hours… I need a bigger fermenter I think (those 60 litre ones at Hop and Grape look like just the trick…)

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Last Friday, I managed to get a batch of Bavarian style Weizen on the go. Since I won’t filter it, or let it settle out, it’ll most likely be a hefeweizen (hefe = yeast) as opposed to a kristallweizen (or “Champagne Weizen” as a mate of mine also told me they are called) which are, ahem, clear…

The recipe is fairly simple – maybe slightly out of style with the Munich malt and using normal pale rather than pilsner malt, but I’m not doing a decoction mash so maybe it’ll help it all out with a bit more of that malty flavour.

2.5kg Wheat Malt
1.9kg Maris Otter
500g Munich Malt

Mash at 67C – use 34L of Asda bottled water with 1.5 tsp CaCl2. Target OG ~1050.

Hops:
45g Hallertau Hersbrucker (2.1%) bittering hop
20g Hallertau Hersbrucker (2.1%) last 15min

Yeast – WLP300; pitch at 13C and allow to rise to 17C.

Efficiency was a bit on the low side (20L at 1049) – it’s been going a few days now, and this yeast is going potty – it filled the gallon and a half of headspace in about 24 hours, and hasn’t quite died down yet. Eventually, I’ll try and reuse the slurry for making a dunkelweizen – this will have wheat and Munich or Vienna and a bit of chocolate and much the same for hops. I may even do a brief decoction, but that seems like a technique that’s prone to cock-ups…

Meanwhile, the last porter (which did get cocked up!) is smelling amazing and slowly creeping down in gravity – it’s currently 1019 (which makes for 63% attenuation – a bit lower than I’d expect, but then I did have to rack it into another fermenter to make way for the hefe – perhaps that was a bit early to do it (though the krausen had pretty much disappeared by that point. Maybe I’ll repitch and see if it’ll come down further or not).

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On Saturday morning, I started off a brew for a batch of porter with the following grist based on Jamil Zs brown porter:

3.9kg Pale malt
500g Munich malt
500g Brown malt
500g Crystal malt
280g Chocolate malt

Mashed it at 67C for a few hours and then sparged it all down. However, at this point, one of the elements in my boiler decided to stop working leaving me with one element to heat 30L of liquid. Eventually got a (not very vigorous) boil and chucked in 60g of some old Bramling Cross hops I had in the freezer. After 45 minutes, that element also pegged out.

Putting the boiler on the hob to try to get it going again, I chucked in the remaining 35g of hops and Irish moss, and I managed to get the brew back up to 95C for another 20 minutes or so, but no boil. Anyhow cooled it and landed up with loads of wort (27L or so…) at 1051.

Of course, to top it all off, I found my immersion heater was also smashed, and so I had to cover the hole in the lid of the fermenter with a saucer. Needless to say, the SO4 has now gone potty and is spewing foam all over the place in the fermenting fridge – it’ll be a minor miracle if this isn’t infected…

Sod.

Still, it smells amazing (think chocolate factory!), and new kettles (+ spares!) are on order with Tesco awaiting some butchering to allow me to replace the elements prior to my next brew, when I am aiming to do a Hefeweizen with some WLP300 that I need to grow up in a starter beforehand.

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No – not a typo but Ollorson’s recipe called “Bitter Bitter” which I brewed yesterday. All Challenger hops in this one and using Nottingham to ferment with. The usual water treatment (CRS, 2 tsp Gypsum, a smidge of CaCl2 and a tsp of NaCl) and then the following recipe:

3.86kg Pale malt
230g Crystal
455g Wheat Malt

Mash 2.5+ hours (was hanging a gate in the garden…) at 66C or so.

Challenger 7.1% 50g – 90min
Challenger 5.5% (but old) 20g – 15min

Turned out with 24L at 1041 (pretty much bang on really) – it’s sitting in the fermenter but no apparent action as yet – though Nottingham can take a time to kick off I seem to remember – it’s been a while since I used it last.

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This was going to be a short old post – I have the lurgy and generally feeling naff – so a quick catchup. Though before I contracted this head cold, I did a mild which is currently sitting in the beer fridge (and looks to have not quite finished yet).

Recipe based on Ollorson’s “Hoddesdon Dark” but replacing torrefied wheat with wheat malt, and omitting the late hops.

3.16kg Maris Otter
0.32kg Wheat malt
0.32kg Crystal
0.16kg Roasted barley

60-odd min mash at 64C

Challenger 7.1% 30g 60min (~23IBU Tinseth)

Fermenting this with recultured Fullers 1845 yeast – trying for the second time with this one – let’s hope it turns out better than the last one I used this yeast in…! Landed with 23L at 1036 so almost bang on.

Also, today, I received a big parcel containing (almost all) the malt I’ve been waiting for, as well as Hersbrucker hops and some liquid yeasties. I have some Weissbier and Begian style ales to make in the next month or two – and I must get round to sorting out the lager I have been meaning to brew – I have all the stuff, but don’t want to tie up the fridge for the minute!

Also, I have enough stuff to make two large batches of 7:2:1 stout to try and use up some old Northern Brewer hops I found in the freezer.  Plus there’s the issue of an old packet of Brambling Cross that must go soon – a made up brew called “BX Porter” is my plan there. Double brew days are going to have to be in order – especially since I need to keep “normal drinking stocks” up in the meantime…and I’m already getting low!

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Barley Wine in the boilerBrewed up a barley wine yesterday evening with another mash-tun busting effort. This one has been brewed as a celebration ale for the 100th monthly “handicap run” by my running club – I was tempted to try for an OG of 1.100, but even I can’t squeeze that much into a 24l mashtun without taking the outturn right down to less than 4 gallons!

So here’s the deal:

7kg Maris Otter
140g Black malt
100g Torrefied Wheat

Mash 66C for 2hrs

320g Brown Sugar
180g Amber Candi Sugar

Hops:
Target (9% slightly old 2006 crop) – 32g, 90min
Fuggles (4.4%) – 20g, 90min
Fuggles (4%) – 50g, 90min

Fuggles (4%) – 50g, 15min

Irish moss at 15min

Pitch 2 packets S04

Yeast merangue anyone?All went very well and hit 20.5litres at 1.086, and should have a bitterness about 60IBU or so – lost a load of wort to the 150g of hops in there, but a decent enough outturn nevertheless. The yeast has really kicked off too – big fluffy merangue top just 16 hours after pitching.

Not bothering with temperature control on this one as the large 6G fermenter doesn’t actually fit in the fridge…

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