TheWiggman
Haters' gonna hate
Being completely out of grain and beer, I turned to a fellow brewer at work who suggested I use his homemade malt. He bought some barley locally (not sure what type) and malted it at home. He asked me what the palest malt there is and then implied that his might be even paler. Apparently he didn't kiln it for too long - if at all - and let the sun do most of the work.
I'm not too clued up on the malting process but assuming he had malt, I was in. This is how it looked when I picked it up -
You can see the grains still had some shoots one them but I'm not a malting house so I went with it. I don't have a mill so I used our home blender and in 200g batches I pulsed for about 3-5 seconds until it started to go floury.
I was quite surprised at good of a job it did. I used a HERMS with a braided hose so I didn't want to go too nuts. You can see that there are barely any visible whole husks -
I ended up with exactly 2.75kg, and he also gave a spare 1kg pre-milled pack of Vienna from Country Brewer. Not fresh, but good enough. I had a look in the fridge and decided I'll use my remaining Coopers yeast, and a few different Aussie and US hops.
In honour of the malter's name, I'll call it Söl's Maltz.
Brew day
Put 15l in the mash tun and a teaspoon of CaCl. Strike water heated, I tipped the Söl's Maltz and noted it had a slightly musty, maybe mouldy smell but it wasn't overpowering. The Vienna smelt a lot better.
Did a 55°C rest for 20 mins then stepped up to 67°C sacc rest.
After 40 mins it was only at 1.040, which was a lot lower than I expected but in all honesty I didn't know what to expect. At least there was conversion happening. To appease the family I went shopping and then all up it had done about a 3.5h mash. It was 1.057 so much better and worth doing the extended mash.
No mashout, I fly sparged with 76°C water and kept going until I had 1.040 in the boiler. I ended up with about 22l (guessing only, I don't have a measuring device). Runnings got down to 1.020ish.
60 min boil with -
Estimating about 30-odd IBU. Ended up at 15l at 1.052 so should be a strongish beer to complement the bitterness. Wow those Galaxy hops have some attitude, really interesting character that will hopefully suit the beer. I know it's a hop that polarises people and this is my first time using it.
No-chilled straight into the fermenter.
I put the Coopers yeast on the starter plate last night to liven them up a little and they took off like a rocket.
Put the yeast in this morning and the temp had dropped to 14°C overnight, even in the unpowered fridge outside. I rigged up a heat belt and controller and it's warming up to 18°C.
So there you have it. Keen to see how this one goes, could be a disaster or could be the greatest beer I'll ever make that I can't replicate again. I shall call it Söl's Palest Ale. Or Stale Ale, depending on how much of an impact the Söl's Maltz have on the finished product.
I'm not too clued up on the malting process but assuming he had malt, I was in. This is how it looked when I picked it up -
You can see the grains still had some shoots one them but I'm not a malting house so I went with it. I don't have a mill so I used our home blender and in 200g batches I pulsed for about 3-5 seconds until it started to go floury.
I was quite surprised at good of a job it did. I used a HERMS with a braided hose so I didn't want to go too nuts. You can see that there are barely any visible whole husks -
I ended up with exactly 2.75kg, and he also gave a spare 1kg pre-milled pack of Vienna from Country Brewer. Not fresh, but good enough. I had a look in the fridge and decided I'll use my remaining Coopers yeast, and a few different Aussie and US hops.
In honour of the malter's name, I'll call it Söl's Maltz.
Brew day
Put 15l in the mash tun and a teaspoon of CaCl. Strike water heated, I tipped the Söl's Maltz and noted it had a slightly musty, maybe mouldy smell but it wasn't overpowering. The Vienna smelt a lot better.
Did a 55°C rest for 20 mins then stepped up to 67°C sacc rest.
After 40 mins it was only at 1.040, which was a lot lower than I expected but in all honesty I didn't know what to expect. At least there was conversion happening. To appease the family I went shopping and then all up it had done about a 3.5h mash. It was 1.057 so much better and worth doing the extended mash.
No mashout, I fly sparged with 76°C water and kept going until I had 1.040 in the boiler. I ended up with about 22l (guessing only, I don't have a measuring device). Runnings got down to 1.020ish.
60 min boil with -
- 10g Cluster + 10g Cascade at 60 mins
- 20g Galaxy 14.5% at 5 mins
Estimating about 30-odd IBU. Ended up at 15l at 1.052 so should be a strongish beer to complement the bitterness. Wow those Galaxy hops have some attitude, really interesting character that will hopefully suit the beer. I know it's a hop that polarises people and this is my first time using it.
No-chilled straight into the fermenter.
I put the Coopers yeast on the starter plate last night to liven them up a little and they took off like a rocket.
Put the yeast in this morning and the temp had dropped to 14°C overnight, even in the unpowered fridge outside. I rigged up a heat belt and controller and it's warming up to 18°C.
So there you have it. Keen to see how this one goes, could be a disaster or could be the greatest beer I'll ever make that I can't replicate again. I shall call it Söl's Palest Ale. Or Stale Ale, depending on how much of an impact the Söl's Maltz have on the finished product.