Hi everyone,
At my local pub the last few schooners of the coopers green is what they call 'mud', i'm assuming it is the same stuff that you find on the bottom of the bottle. I was just reading about people reusing their yeast cakes (which makes the cost of yeast considerably cheaper, thanks guys!) which got me thinking about the mud at the pub. I would really like to know if i could use this instead of culturing yeast as coopers is my favourite session beer and i have yet to recreate the exact flavour.
As his is my first post i should do a little intro. So here it is
I first starting brewing for mum when i was 15. The fermenter used to sit in the second bathroom which would receive sun most of the day so it got really hot in there. Needless to say the beer would turn out quite funky, which was good because it meant that my folks never drank it so it was easy for me to sneak quite a few bottles. Anything alcoholic is very drinkable when you are 15!
A few years later i busted out the fermenter again, this time i bought a book, 'brewing beer' by John Palmer, which changed the way I brewed. I replaced the airlock with gladwrap, was insanely clean, threw a hydrometer in my brew (so i could check all the time) and then put an aquariam heater in my brew to control the temp at 26C. The brews turned out better but were still not quite good enough. I experimented with hops and malt but nothing made it excellent, it was still quite obviously 'homebrew'. (no offense intended to anyone here)
Interestingly, the best brew i ever did was when my aquarium heater died in winter. Temps were around 16-18 at night and around 22 during the day. I thought the batch would be ruined because of the low temps but it turned out great. Excited that i must have found the perfect recipe (i tried different recipes all the time in the hope for the 'holy grail', a great beer) I put down several more brews with the heater back in. I was thinking that if it turned out alright at the 'incorrect' temp then imagine how it would turn out when it was heated! Unfortunately the brews once again were sub par and i gave up.
A few years later (which brings us to now) i stumbled across this website when trying to help my little sis get into homebrewing, she's at uni drinking cask wine so even the worst homebrew will still be fine! Imagine my surprise when i read that all you guys are brewing at 18C!! This has piqued my interest again and i am going to give this another shot.
I have a fridge that has a thermostat that goes up to 18C and another bar fridge which i will use for my bulk priming. The reason for two fridges is a) i already had both of them anyway B) the fridge with the good thermostat won't allow me to have the tap fitted, its a really small 'car fridge'. So i will have to tranfer the beer to another container before bottling anyway, i figure i may as well bulk prime.
I've also bought some proper yeast after reading that
I'm really hoping that this all works as i actually really enjoy the process but the results have never been the best. I have tasted excellent homebrew though so i do know its possible. I'm also going to put some hops in as i'm a keen gardener as well, just got to find a place that sells rhizomes.
So to sum it all up, can i use the coopers keg dregs from the pub instead of yeast?; does my new setup sound alright (with the two fridges and bilk priming)? and most importantly...
Thanks everyone for a great site!!
At my local pub the last few schooners of the coopers green is what they call 'mud', i'm assuming it is the same stuff that you find on the bottom of the bottle. I was just reading about people reusing their yeast cakes (which makes the cost of yeast considerably cheaper, thanks guys!) which got me thinking about the mud at the pub. I would really like to know if i could use this instead of culturing yeast as coopers is my favourite session beer and i have yet to recreate the exact flavour.
As his is my first post i should do a little intro. So here it is
I first starting brewing for mum when i was 15. The fermenter used to sit in the second bathroom which would receive sun most of the day so it got really hot in there. Needless to say the beer would turn out quite funky, which was good because it meant that my folks never drank it so it was easy for me to sneak quite a few bottles. Anything alcoholic is very drinkable when you are 15!
A few years later i busted out the fermenter again, this time i bought a book, 'brewing beer' by John Palmer, which changed the way I brewed. I replaced the airlock with gladwrap, was insanely clean, threw a hydrometer in my brew (so i could check all the time) and then put an aquariam heater in my brew to control the temp at 26C. The brews turned out better but were still not quite good enough. I experimented with hops and malt but nothing made it excellent, it was still quite obviously 'homebrew'. (no offense intended to anyone here)
Interestingly, the best brew i ever did was when my aquarium heater died in winter. Temps were around 16-18 at night and around 22 during the day. I thought the batch would be ruined because of the low temps but it turned out great. Excited that i must have found the perfect recipe (i tried different recipes all the time in the hope for the 'holy grail', a great beer) I put down several more brews with the heater back in. I was thinking that if it turned out alright at the 'incorrect' temp then imagine how it would turn out when it was heated! Unfortunately the brews once again were sub par and i gave up.
A few years later (which brings us to now) i stumbled across this website when trying to help my little sis get into homebrewing, she's at uni drinking cask wine so even the worst homebrew will still be fine! Imagine my surprise when i read that all you guys are brewing at 18C!! This has piqued my interest again and i am going to give this another shot.
I have a fridge that has a thermostat that goes up to 18C and another bar fridge which i will use for my bulk priming. The reason for two fridges is a) i already had both of them anyway B) the fridge with the good thermostat won't allow me to have the tap fitted, its a really small 'car fridge'. So i will have to tranfer the beer to another container before bottling anyway, i figure i may as well bulk prime.
I've also bought some proper yeast after reading that
I'm really hoping that this all works as i actually really enjoy the process but the results have never been the best. I have tasted excellent homebrew though so i do know its possible. I'm also going to put some hops in as i'm a keen gardener as well, just got to find a place that sells rhizomes.
So to sum it all up, can i use the coopers keg dregs from the pub instead of yeast?; does my new setup sound alright (with the two fridges and bilk priming)? and most importantly...
Thanks everyone for a great site!!