I've brewed my own for some 20 years. But with a medication I'm NOW on any alcohol gives me a raging headache.
Bummer Eh??
BUT after some experimentation I found Coopers "Birell"; supposedly 0.5% alcohol.
Ok... OK .... so it sounds dreadful. Actually it doesn't taste too bad and it doesn't give me a blazing headache.
QUESTION
Using Coopers cans (don't all abuse me) how much malt would I use in 25l to get down that low.
Or should I use a 60l brewer and add 1 or a fraction more 750gm cans to how many Liters in brewer?
Any help would be appreciated. I know it's a sad way to be in but at least I can still pretend it's 100HP real beer <_<
A thought came to me re lowering volatile levels (AKA in this case "alcohol") in a beer.
In industrial applications the "flash evaporator" is used as the first stage in natural gas processing to drop out heavy ends (C8 and higher) and leave the lighter ends in a gas stream. Stripping higher than Octane out as liquids and leaving the methane, ethane, propane, butane as a gas by explosively decompressing the wet gas stream.
Reversing the process somewhat, if you took a fluid stream, such as beer, compressed it (I do mean compress, say up to 1000 psi) and then under controlled conditions allowed it to rapidly (read almost instantaneously) come down to a much lower pressure, the lighter fractions (alcohol) would gas off, leaving a reduced alcohol beer with the same solids as before. It might mess up the CO2 in the brewed beer but the heavier hop oils should stay in the fluid stream. The alcohol with a BP at about 72 degrees C would flash off as a gas.
I'm probably explaining it a bit clumsily, but it would work.
Thoughts ???
Sorry to hear of you being on such a medication: hopefully a temporary thing.
I routinely make beer with fairly low alcohol: in the 1.5-2% alcohol range. This is all-grain, loaded up with hops, just not as much fermentables. You can make a perfectly nice beer this way with 1.5% alcohol. Fermentation is very quick, overnight even. That's with Windsor yeast, which seems to leave quite a lot of residual sugar. The beer's light, hoppy, you don't get drunk on it nor does it give a hangover.
So I suggest pushing this approach further: more hops, less fermentables. I'm not suggesting that you'll get a prize-winning, balanced ale, but it might still be refreshing and palatable (after all, the hop signature will be there). Worth a try. Maybe 1% will taste fine and not give you a headache.
One problem with boiling off alcohol is: how are you going to measure this? We all use hydrometers and other measures of density, but they won't give you the answer you need. Not many of us have access to a gas chromatograph (like labs use) at home.
Good luck.
Peter.
Removing the alcohol from beer should be illegal. We need Australian Purity Laws to stop this sacrilege.
:angry:
During Dry July last year, a muslim mate brought in some no-alcohol beer. I'm pretty sure it was Haagen. It was actually pretty nice.I've brewed my own for some 20 years. But with a medication I'm NOW on any alcohol gives me a raging headache.
Bummer Eh??
BUT after some experimentation I found Coopers "Birell"; supposedly 0.5% alcohol.
Ok... OK .... so it sounds dreadful. Actually it doesn't taste too bad and it doesn't give me a blazing headache.
QUESTION
Using Coopers cans (don't all abuse me) how much malt would I use in 25l to get down that low.
Or should I use a 60l brewer and add 1 or a fraction more 750gm cans to how many Liters in brewer?
Any help would be appreciated. I know it's a sad way to be in but at least I can still pretend it's 100HP real beer <_<
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