- Equipment Cleaning - having the mash tun, pots and other associated equipment clean before the next brew day
- Manage Fermenters - checking the temperature of the closet, keeping enough sanitizer in the air lock, etc.
- Keg/Keezer Maintenance - cleaning kegs, cleaning beer line, keeping inside of keezer ice and mold free
Monday, January 30, 2012
Brewery Upkeep
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Hop Profile: Zythos
ZYTHOS™ ─ a proprietary hop blend created to embody the powerful tradition and aroma you expect for your finest ales and IPA brews. With targeted brewing values of 11.9% alpha and 5.0% beta, ZYTHOS is an IPA style blend created to optimize and exceed the aroma characteristics you require.The high alpha-acid levels provide a big bitterness boost to the beer. This hop blend is also said to have low co-humulone levels. That means the hop blend should have a smoother finish. Hops with high co-humulone levels are associated with a certain harshness that can be left in a beer.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Change Is Coming
Saturday, January 21, 2012
24 Hours, 2 Brews
Following a pretty nasty snow/ice storm, I was finally able to get to my local homebrew shop to pick up some ingredients. Within 24 hours I had 2 beers in the fermenter. This was crucial because I am now down to 1 beer on tap, 2 beers carbonating, and nothing in the pipeline.
First up was the next reincarnation of my Guinea Pig IPA. Due to a computer crash and some mismanagement of paper copies I had no record of my previous recipe. So I had to recreate the recipe to the best of my ability then make the changes I thought could help the next version. Unfortunately the homebrew shop did not have the hops I wanted to use so I subbed the zythos (more on this hop in a future post) hop for both amarillo and simcoe. I pitched the yeast before I went to bed and got together what I would need for the brew in the morning.
The second beer I was making was my first attempt at Mike McDole's Janet's Brown Ale recipe. I had a couple friends over who wanted to see the brewing process. It's always nice to have someone else around to mill 14 pounds of grain. This was the first time I had trouble hitting my mash temps. First I was too low then made adjustments to be too high and finally got it close enough. I ended up being slightly low on my starting gravity for this beer but everything else went smoothly. The difference in gravity shouldn't make too much of an impact on the finished beer.
Both of these beers are now bubbling away in the basement closet. The IPA took a little longer than normal to get started. I will be very happy in a few weeks when these beers finish and I can put them on tap after what we have now is drained during our yearly Super Bowl party.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
The Importance of Taking Measurements
The keg of Guinea Pig IPA poured its last pint tonight so I put Her Majesty's Sloppy Seconds ESB on tap. This was the beer made from the second runnings of the barleywine I brewed a couple months ago. It was an experiment to see how it would turn out. My first taste of the finished beer was a sweet beer, nothing like the ESB I was expecting. However, because I did not take good notes on this beer after getting it in the fermenter I don't know what the cause of the sweetness is. It could be that I didnt add enough hops or it didnt ferment to completion. The experiment now doesn't help because I was lazy.