Thursday, 17 March 2016

THE CRUSADE CONTINUES

Hi Everyone,

In my time off I: 
- Got Married
- Built a TARDIS Kegerator
- Bought a Grain-Father Brewing System
- Brewed lots of Beer
- Drank Beer
- Emptied and re-filled Barrels
- Went to Festivals

So Plenty has happened, I've re-evaluated my priorities, and found that I was spending too much time trying to actually write about brewing and beer, instead of just enjoying the hobby, and so on.

So, what I decided to do with this blog is turn it into more of a niche. (I'm struggling to find words to describe how I'll run it. 
But essentially, I'll post the odd article and write some stuff, but not really try to find something to write about, as previously done.

So the only stuff you'll find here is actual interesting bits and pieces from brewing I think NEED to be talked about, rather than this is a beer I made today, this is how I think it tastes etc. I'll still probably do that for some of the more interesting beers I make, but they'll be more about the experiments etc.

SO, I'm mid post about writing up about getting married.......
Yep, MARRIAGE. But don't worry, it's very much Beer related.

So, the TARDIS.......
I'm not writing about it, but see the link below to see how it was made etc.
It worked well, and it was a great feature point of the Beer Garden.


So, thats all for now.
See you next time.

Thursday, 7 January 2016

I'm coming back.....

After a long absence, I've decided to do some writing.

Stay tuned I'll be around soon.
Come see me around March time....


Wednesday, 20 May 2015

Short, but Sweet!

Hi Everyone, I know I've been pretty slack with reviews and posts for awhile. but hey, that's what happens when life gets in the way.

So, I write this post to let everyone know (Those who do actually read this), that I will not be posting anything further on the blog, I may in future decide to write some more at some stage, and so I will leave the blog open and available for anyone to look at and get ideas from.

But thanks for reading, and being a part of this. I will still brew beer, and share it around, but I just can't find the time to actually sit down and write these big extended posts.

So, read and look at those blogs I regularly read and keep on Brewing.

Cheers Everyone...... ROB.

Monday, 20 April 2015

Fresh New Zealand Hops

Yes, Thats right Fresh hops, as in pulled off the vine, nice and sticky to touch, smells like freedom Green, fresh hops.

Brewed up a storm awhiel back, brewing a brown ale with fresh Nelson Sauvion hops, for a gcompetition in Wellington. I did it in collaboration with Finney this time, kegged and conditioned.

I'll giveyou the run down of the recipe and the subsequent notes from the competition.

FRESH HOPS BROWN ALE
Malt-
4.8kg Pale Malt (Gladfields)
0.45kg Wheat (Gladfields)
0.3kg Medium Crystal (Gladfields)
0.26kg Pale Chocolate (Gladfields)
0.2kg Redback (Gladfields)

Hops-
15g Pacific Jade (Pellets) @ 60
100g Southern Cross @ 20 (Freshly picked by Finney)
250g Nelson Sauvin @ 10 (Fresh Hops from Brewtopia.net.nz)
500g Nelson Sauvin @ 0 (Fresh Hops from Brewtopia.net.nz)

Yeast: US-05

Brewed on the Grainfather, and boy, what a great system that is. easy to use, fast and efficient. The efficiency sucked, as We sparged too much with 75 degree water, by about 2-3 litres. So ended up at 1.054 instead of 1.060, which may have made a difference. but never mind.
Furthermore due to the over sparge, we ended up at 1.010, I assume this is because of the much thinner final runnings and less sugar to get rid of.

Onto the notes, sorry no pictures again. This is the feedback from the judges in Wellington, all of which were Professional Brewers in some capacity.

19.5 out of 40. The notes I have are - "Interesting herbal character, coffee and minty / menthol, astringent but goodish flavour, needs more hops."

Primary1(Plastic): Fallen Soldier Oatmeal Stout
Primary2(Plastic): {Nothing}
Primary3(Bretts/Sours): {Nothing}
10 Litre PET Carboy #1: {Nothing}
Sour#1(Wide Mouth Glass): Guts & Glory Flanders Red
Sour#2 (PET Carboy): Gracy and Glory Sour Blonde
Barrel: Hail Caesar Oud Bruin Ale
Bottled: Chch Homebrew Club Barleywine / Braggot Ale / Secret Crusade American Stout / Night Crawler Imperial Stout
Keg1: Fresh Hop Nelson Brown
Keg2: Bad Wolf Belgian IPA III (550)
Keg3: Silent Guardian Red IPA (Panhead Vindicator Variation)
Next Beer to Brew: Original Sin II

Thursday, 16 April 2015

Who's afraid of the BIG BAD WOLF?!

Yep, I'm a true slacker. It's been 2-3 weeks since I even looked at this blog. I need to make more of a concerted effort to update it and give my all beit small readership something to do.

Now onto what I wanted to talk about.

The Bad Wolf, some of you may have heard of this beer I've made a few times. Essentially it is an IPa, with Belgian Yeast. I've useda different yeast each time I've made it with WY1214, followed by WLP530, and finally in the interpretation WLP550. I've been told this new yeast is more along the lines of the Ardennes strain, which supposedly plays nicely with hops. Sao I figured, why not give it a shot.I stuck with much the same malt bill I have in the past, and as usual with this beer, it seems to end up very much under gravity... I hit 1.057, despite looking for 1.060. My Last ever BIAB... for now anyway.

Here is the recipe and tasting notes:

Bad Wolf Belgian IPA III:
Malt
Golden Promise - 5.5kg
Gladfield Vienna - 0.35kg
Caramunich II - 0.2kg
Melanoidin - 0.2kg
Acidulated Malt - 0.15kg

Now I changed the hop schedule somewhat, as I wanted to get more fruit out of it, so I naturally chose Citra. and Boy did it deliver a punch.

20g Pacific Jade @ 60
20g Centennial @ 30
30g Centennial @ 10
50g Amarillo @ 0 (15 min stand, prior to chilling)
35g Citra @ 0 (15 min stand, prior to chilling)

DRYHOP: 50g Amarillo / 35g Citra 5 Days (inc cold crash)

Yeast: WLP550 - 2 Litre Starter.

OG 1.057 / FG1.012

Tasting:

APPEARANCE: Despite putting Gelatin in the Keg, it still hasn't cleared itself up completely, I tried the brulosophy way of doing things this time for gelatin, which was a fraction of what I had used previously. Clearly its not as effective. Either that or I'm still doing something wrong. Looks good, considerably Lighter than previous versions.
AROMA: Citra, and Melon, grapefruit, with a hint of Belgian funk in the back ground. Exactly What I was going for.
FLAVOUR: Initially it was all Belgian yeast in its early days, but at about 4 weeks in a keg, the hops really began to pop and come forward, this is where the grapefruit and melon type flavour come in, the yeast plays a great supporting role in getting some spice in there. I think I've found the right yeast.
MOUTHFEEL: Slightly lacking in mouth feel, but that's the lower amount of special malts, the yeast helps to keep it from being too thin, nice malt background, just enough to keep life interesting.

OVERALL: This is fantastic. Exactly what I was looking for, especially from the Citra hops. Unfortunately, as Citra hops are so hard to come by, they will be removed for an alternative in Version 4. The Malt needs a touch of work, I'll be going back to Gladfield Ale for a start, as golden Promise was my only choice when I made it this time at finney's shop. I'll also add to the specialties, I miss that colour I had previously, copper/burnt orange, where as this one is more of a golden colour. hops will be changed considerably, to use varieties, which are more readily available if I was to brew commercially (contract of course). I'd probably Swap the Citra out, for something like Galaxy or Mosaic. Centennial stays, Amarillo will make way for something else.

I haven't updated on my new rig at this stage, I'm still dialling in the process for it, but there'll be a post at some stage. Mike over at themadfermentationist.com is actually using a similar style of brewing, which is cool, and shows the process can produce good beers.

I brewed an Oatmeal Stout, the weekend just been. In association with those who fought to for this great country, I have named it the Fallen Solider (Anzac biscuits use Oats, so that my excuse anyway). I toyed with the idea of adding coconut to it, but I don't think I will.

Last post said I wasn't sure what to brew, so I brewed an imperial Red IPA, or an american Strong Ale to some, with Centennial, Chinook and Zythos. I created this beer based on a strong following for Arrogant Bastard Ale (which I'll get to try in about 6 weeks) and a beer here by Panhead Brewery, called the Vindicator Strong Ale, which uses said hops, where as the AB only uses Chinook. I used Special B and Caramunich II for special malts Nice and Simple.

Until Next time (I'll try to be more pro-active, promise)

Primary1(Plastic): Fallen Soldier Oatmeal Stout
Primary2(Plastic): {Nothing}
Primary3(Bretts/Sours): {Nothing}
10 Litre PET Carboy #1: {Nothing}
Sour#1(Wide Mouth Glass): Guts & Glory Flanders Red
Sour#2 (PET Carboy): Gracy and Glory Sour Blonde
Barrel: Hail Caesar Oud Bruin Ale
Bottled: Chch Homebrew Club Barleywine / Braggot Ale / Secret Crusade American Stout / Night Crawler Imperial Stout
Keg1: Fresh Hop Nelson Brown
Keg2: Bad Wolf Belgian IPA III (550)
Keg3: Silent Guardian Red IPA (Panhead Vindicator Variation)
Next Beer to Brew: Original Sin II Split two ways

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Fresh Hops and Stouts

It's harvest time here in New Zealand for Hops, and I was able to get hold of some very very fresh Nelson Sauvin Hops, still on the vine. So we decided to brew two beers with them,

The first a Pale Ale, with some extra Southern Cross Finney had freshly picked, along side the wet Nelson hops. The second was a little more ambitious, an American styled Brown Ale, with all the hops we could fit in the kettle. All of which was brewed in one day on the new fancy Grainfather system, that is now available.
BUT MORE ON THOSE IN ANOTHER POST:

Onto my review of the American Stout brewed, as per my previous post.
FV: 21 Litres
OG: 1.066
FG: 1.017
Yeast: WLP090 San-Diego
Hops: Nelson Sauvin and Centennial
Malts: Pale, Rye, Roast Barley Pale Chocolate and Caramunich II
Bottle Conditioned, carb to 2.1 volumes.

Appearance: Fluffy brown head, dark brown with ruby highlights. clear and inviting.

Aroma: Roasted malts, and hefty dark chocolate, fills the nostril, very nice, I pick up some hops, some slight citrus, but mostly malts. There are some higher alcohols there as well, which is an issue.

Flavour: High Bitterness, plenty of chocolate, but not really roasty, like I'd expect. some nice chocolate, and some rye in the finish. But again some Alcohol notes come through as it warms.

Mouthfeel: Good mouth-feel, nice and thick, plenty to it. The rye makes this possible.

Overall: Very nice, and a would brew again. Need to clean up the fermentation on it, and remove the Rye Malt. Increase late hops, and decrease Bittering hops to make it more balanced. Of course, I'll probably swap the ratio of Roast Barley and Chocolate around, to get some more roast character out of it. Nice or the impending New Zealand Winter.


On a separate note: Bad Wolf III has been kegged and is tasting good. that'll be reviewed very soon. I also have 90% of my new system built and running, so expect a post on that once It's dialled in slightly.

Primary1(Plastic): Fresh Hopped Nelson Brown
Primary2(Plastic): {Nothing}
Primary3(Bretts/Sours): {Nothing}
10 Litre PET Carboy #1: {Nothing}
Sour#1(Wide Mouth Glass): Guts & Glory Flanders Red
Sour#2 (PET Carboy): Gracy and Glory Sour Blonde
Barrel: Hail Caesar Oud Bruin Ale
Bottled: Chch Homebrew Club Barleywine / Braggot Ale / Secret Crusade American Stout / Night Crawler Imperial Stout
Keg1: {Empty}
Keg2: Bad Wolf Belgian IPA III
Keg3: {Empty}
Next Beer to Brew: Unknown

Sunday, 22 February 2015

Sour Beer #2 - Sour Blonde & A Levitation Clone

I'll start with a short review of my recent American Amber, which was a clone of Stone Brewing Co.'s Levitation ale. Funnily enough since I brewed this, Stone have announed, they are retiring the brew, and it will no longer be available. A shame, as it's one ofthe better beers around,  especially since it is a perfect session beer. Aptly named Bathed in Blood II (My first iteration was amber, but beared little resemblance to this one).

Aroma: Nice Caramel/crystal aroma, with a hefty whack of lovely amarillo hops, a hint of Simcoe also comes in with nice hints of pine.
Appearance:
 Nice Bright clarity, with a nice dark red hint to it, the glass here doesn't do it justice, as in a nice goblet, its a nice dark blood red colour. head is off white, and carbonation is good.
Flavour: Yum, nice maltiness, body I thought to start with was slightly thin, but I'm finding now that its perfect for what I'm looking for. Big hop presence, big amount of fruity Amarillo hops, with again a small hint of Pine from the simcoe. this is where I'm stuck, the crystal hops in the recipe, I don't believe they come through, but I could be wrong, as to be fair, I'm not sure what to expect from them.
Mouthfeel: Good carbonation, nice mouthfeel for a lighter session beer, about where I want it, head retention is perfect.
Nice Red colour on the Levitation Clone.
Overall: Despite the darker colour, its a perfect session beer for the summer days.If I made any changes, the only one I would actually make, if I did, as to make the Shepherds Delight 250g instead of 240g Wedding beer #2 is sorted. Heres the recipe:
Bathed in Blood II

OG: 1.049
FG: 1.014
FV Volume: 21 Litres

4.2kg PGladfield Pale
0.1kg Acidulated (pH)
0.4kg Medium Crystal - Gladfield
0.24kg Shepherds Delight - Gladfield
0.03kg Dark Chocolate - Gladfield

60min: 15g Simcoe
30min: 30g Amarillo
00min: 15g Simcoe / 35g Crystal (25min Hop Stand, prior to Chilling)
Dryhop: 50g Amarillo  - 4 Days

Yeast: WLP090 Slurry - San Diego Super Yeast

Goal #6: More Sours - I have plans to add to my Guts and Glory Flanders Red, I plan to add a Sour blonde and a Darker beer as well through the year.so watch this space.

I have somewhat acheived this goal, I have brewed Sour beer #2. I kep things quiet while I sorted the recipe, and tossed up between a lighter brew and a darker beer. In the end the Lighter version won out, but only because Instead of a primary yeast, followed by secondary fermentation with bugs, I threw 2 vials of THIS into the fermenter and I'll let it fester for a couple of weeks. Hardly vigorous fermentation, but it seems to be moving, and we'll see how it progresses over the coming months. I'm yet undecided (I have plenty of time) on how to splitthis batch, whether it be fruit, hops or otherwise, but I'm sure I'll figure something out.

On a separate note, I am still running the new vessel via BIAB, however for the sour, I skipped the Mash out step, to see what sort of difference I would get based off my projected system efficiency (includes mashout) and without. It seems the difference is negligible. I've approximated 1 OG point in total. This will be to do more with the extended time mashing, rather than any temperature changes/differences. So an interesting outcome on that one.

As I said, I'll now be posting recipe straight to here, to save time etc. but if you don't have brewtoad or any brewing software I suggest you invest in it.

Spartan Series: Grace & Glory  Brew Date: 14/02/2015
OG: 1.060 (Measured)
IBU: 25 approx
Spartan Series - Grace and Glory
FV Volume: 20 Litres
Efficiency: 67%

Malts
Gladfield Pils 4.5kg
Gladfield Wheat 1kg
Gladfield Vienna 300gm
Acidulated Malt 200gm

Hops
NZ Hall ertau (Wakatu) - 7%AA
60min: 18g
30min: 15g

Yeast
2 Vials (No Starter due to blending) TYB Melange
The Melange yeast vials

this will sit in primary for the entire duration of the beer, and be racked onto separate places for blending/ageing on fruits wines/ oak etc where needed. 

I should also update on Sour #1 (Guts & Glory Flanders Red). To be honest this is going great, its pretty close to oaking, and racking, Plan is to oak right on 12 months anniversary, with about 30gm of cubes. Cubes will be boiled for 5-10 mins to sanitise and remove excess tannins.  Then from there, I'll taste and rack where needed (I've guesstimated about 3 months) half will be bottled straight, the otherhalf will be fruited, and given the difficulty we have here in New Zealand getting Sour Cherries, I'll probably be going with Raspberries, and ageing for another 3 months probably. By that point the carboy will be free, and Sour #3 will be brewed.

Pretty exciting stuff. for those who have been paying attention, let me know if you've brewed a sour, and how it went, and how often you brew these to get pipelines etc. going.