Jye
Hop Junky
- Joined
- 9/5/05
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So after Brew Dogs efforts with Tactical Nuclear Penguin and Sink The Bismarck I really want to give this a go. To date I have done a Weizen-Eisbock and that was slowly frozen down to -6C in a fridge. The result was about 11% and I think it was a successful beer. However yesterday I attempted an epic eis beer along the lines of Brew Dog which completely failed by only getting to 8%... even though it was in a -27C freezer!
From this I have a feeling rapid freezing will not concentrate the alc and a slower controlled drop in temp is required. My attempt used an american brown (about 5.5%) in a 3L plastic container and I shook it every hr to create a slurry. The remaining 500ml at the end of freezing was then poured off.
Unanswered questions;
Does shaking the freezing contain to create a slurry help or should it be left to freeze as a block?
High or low alc starting beer. Which one tastes better? Lower alc because it has a more controlled fermentation and possible less higher alcohols?
So lets get a discussion going for these very high alcohol eis-beers and maybe everyone can give it ago in their freezer to contribute some results. You will need a hydrometer and refractometer to measure the resulting alc%, Beersmith has a function to calculate this.
Cheers
Jye
Wiki
Data taken from.
edit - wiki data source
From this I have a feeling rapid freezing will not concentrate the alc and a slower controlled drop in temp is required. My attempt used an american brown (about 5.5%) in a 3L plastic container and I shook it every hr to create a slurry. The remaining 500ml at the end of freezing was then poured off.
Unanswered questions;
Does shaking the freezing contain to create a slurry help or should it be left to freeze as a block?
High or low alc starting beer. Which one tastes better? Lower alc because it has a more controlled fermentation and possible less higher alcohols?
So lets get a discussion going for these very high alcohol eis-beers and maybe everyone can give it ago in their freezer to contribute some results. You will need a hydrometer and refractometer to measure the resulting alc%, Beersmith has a function to calculate this.
Cheers
Jye
Wiki
- Freezing in this scenario begins at a temperature significantly below 0 C.
- The first material to freeze is not the water, but a dilute solution of alcohol in water.
- The liquid left behind is richer in alcohol, and as a consequence, further freezing would take place at progressively lower temperatures. The frozen material, while always poorer in alcohol than the (increasingly rich) liquid, becomes progressively richer in alcohol.
- Further stages of removing frozen material and waiting for more freezing will come to nought once the liquid uniformly cools to the temperature of whatever is cooling it.
- If progressively colder temperatures are available,
- the frozen material will contain progressively larger concentrations of alcohol, and
- the fraction of the original alcohol removed with the solid material will increase.
- In practice, unless the removal of solid material carries away liquid, the degree of concentration will depend on the final temperature rather than on the number of cycles of removing solid material and chilling.
- Thermodynamics gives fair assurance, even without more information about alcohol and water than that they freely dissolve in each other, that
- even if temperatures somewhat below the freezing point of ethyl alcohol are achieved, there will still be alcohol and water mixed as a liquid, and
- at some still lower temperature, the remaining alcohol-and-water solution will freeze without an alcohol-poor solid being separable.
Data taken from.
edit - wiki data source