Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Beers of the season

Well, I'm inspired. The great thing about homebrewing is that you can choose to make as interesting a brew as you like. For Christmas, I plan to make a ginger beer, of the alcoholic variety. Ray made a good suggestion: take a pale ale recipe and either add ginger to the boil early for a mild ginger flavor; or add some 10 minutes before the end for an intense ginger flavor. I'm thinking intense!

By chance, I have all the ingredients I need, already on hand. So, as soon as the saison is bottled, its time for ginger beer!

Bubbling and musings about temperature

A sigh of relief. The fermenter started bubbling early this morning. That's 40-some-odd hours before a visible sign. It may be that this will tip me over the edge to buying a 6.5 gallon glass carboy. The nice thing about carboys vs. the plastic bucket is that you can see fermentation (or infection) activity long before the bubbles start.

This is the longest time it has ever taken (in my illustrious 10-month, six-batch beer career) for vigorous fermentation to begin. Besides the vacuum factor, I wonder if the five degrees of cooling by the window shocked the yeast into inactivity. I would have thought it would take a greater temperature variance, but who knows? After all, the desired range is 60-75ºF, so a five degree shift could well be significant.

Of course, while I am thinking about carboys, some people really have it figured out with the kegerator. (here too) Definitely something to look forward to.

Monday, October 30, 2006

The dreaded vacuum

No disasters apparent! With enough experience, I imagine that the initial 48 hours in the fermenter go by with a bit less worry, however, I still get concerned when the fermentation isn't obviously bubbling along after 12 hours.

Paying attention to the basics probably helps too. I freely admit that I am a trifle paranoid with cleaning and sanitization. I may need to get a bit more strict about temperature control too, just for peace of mind.

Here's what I did. I cooled my wort down to about 65ºF, poured it into the fermenter and topped it up to 4.5 gallons, then took a hydrometer reading. It was about 1.075. While making a beer that big would be amusing, I was trying to stick to the recipe, so I diluted that up to 5.0 gallons. However, I had run out of spring water. So I used boiled water. Well, even a 1/2 gallon of 212ºF water heats up 4.5 gallons of 65ºF water. In fact, it went up to 78ºF!

I figured, who cares? The place I put the fermenter in the winter is nearby the window, so it would cool down anyway, right? I didn't have any vodka, so I poured a little of the boiled water into the airlock.

Well, the fermenter has cooled down now. All the way to 73ºF. So it occurs to me that this created a vacuum in the fermenter, since cold air takes up less space than warm air. No big deal, except that the vacuum sucked some of the airlock water into the bucket. And, since the pressure is lower than it started, the fermentation will not be obvious for a while longer: the yeast have to produce more gas than usual before any can escape.

So I imagine fermentation has begun, but I won't know until later.

Sunday, October 29, 2006

OG 1.065 and five gallons!

That Saison should be nice and strong. :-)

Events everywhere!

Just thought I would post a few event calendar listings while I wait for the wort to cool. Check out:

Ale Street News
, in particular for locals to NYC the Brazen Head Real Ale Cask Festival

And on a completely random note, please have a look at the Catholic blessing for beer. Thanks to the Home Brewers Journal for that link.

Beer and Cheese

Jimmy's at 43 E. 7th Street Manhattan has Beer and Cheese tastings every Wednesday. We went this past week and were treated to some lovely cheese (goat cheese, smoked gouda, and an aged cheddar I believe).

Anne Saxelby (Saxelby Cheesemongers) and her New England artisanal cheeses can be found at the market at Essex and Delancy. The cheddar was decidedly a winner - fruit and nut tastes, and just a little crunchy (because of the aging).

The beers were the Black Bear Porter, Sunday River Lager and 420 IPA from Stone Coast Brewery, Maine and the Red Rice Ale, Weizen, and Japanese Classic Ale from
Hitachino Nest.

All beers were good. I get up to Maine about three or four times a year, so I will have to look up Stone Coast. Hitachino Nest was interesting because they brew the beer using traditional sake brewing techniques.

Batch number six - Belgian Saison

Brewing again! Today's is a Belgian Saison. The original inspiration for this beer was a saison that I drank in Bethlehem. The citrus flavor really grabbed me. Recipe:

6.6 lb. Munton's Light Malt Extract
1 lb. Munton & Fison Wheat Dry Malt
1 lb. Light Belgian Candi Sugar
1/2 lb. Weyermann Cara-Helles Malt 9º L
1 oz. Northern Brewer Hops (Bittering)
1/2 oz. Kent Golding U.K. Hops (Flavoring)
1/2 oz. Bitter Curacao (orange peel) (Flavoring)
1/2 oz. Kent Golding U.K. Hops (Finishing)
Wyeast # 1214XL Belgian Abbey Ale Yeast

The folks at Keystone say to expect:

OG 1.054-1.060
FG 1.010-1.015

I will likely write more on this, but I have to buy some ice!

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Beerfest on the Pier in NYC

Beerfest has come to New York City. Looks like quite a party!

Brewtopia in a couple weeks.