Droopy Brew
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YEah sort of what I thought. For the sake of 2 or 3 bottles I wont bother racking and BP. A couple of drops will do.
Cheers.
Cheers.
Did not know this great infowynnum1 said:If you want to measure sugar accurately use digital scales and to check accuracy 10 cents icoin weighs 5.66 grams 5 cents= 2.83 grams $2 =6.6 grams and $1 = 9 grams these weights are constant for coin operated machines.
If the scales are not accurate compensate.
Kingy,Kingy said:think I might have another crack at this soon. I wont be using pellets again as it was a fairly dirty taste and pitch a bigger starter and mash a degree lower to dry it out a bit more as It was a bit to sweet for me in the keg. The couple I bottled where a lot better but probly because of the priming sugar and the fact I was swirling the yeast up as I was swigging on the tallie.
Another thing I remember was when I recultured the yeast, the clear coopers pale that was drunk tasted like **** without the yeasties in there. I much prefer my coopers yeasty. So I may even make a batch to just bottle for when I go elsewhere for a drink or just for times when I feel like necking a tallie.
thread revival, after 2 years of AG i realised ive never brewed a CPA, what tha? good old faithful of mine before home brewing, so time to get back to my commercial drinking roots.
my only question is, with the CPA being so much about the re-cultured coopers yeast. will cold crashing as would be my standard practice, affect the outcome of my CPA? or do i just keg at ferment temp as to get as much suspended yeast into the keg?
or am i totally way off the mark here?
As an update to this recipe I went on a tour of Coopers Brewery on Friday.
I asked a few questions of the tour guide who did know his stuff but I’ll obviousy provide a caveat that he’s not the head brewer, rather a customer relations person.
This is what I learnt for those who’d like to get the closest clone they can to the original that’s on the shelves now.
1- Water.
Coopers draw water from an aquifer below the brewery and use reverse osmosis to desalinate. They then add minerals to achieve a Burton water profile. I didn’t get the specific breakdown of this profile, but online searches yield plenty of results. Honestly, I haven’t started changing my water profile so I didn’t pay as much attention to this point as some others may. Sorry for that.
2- Grain.
Now that Coopers malt their own barley on site and mash with grain only a few days old they have moved to a SMaSH type brew.
The only grain is their Pale Malt and no sugar is added.
I asked about wheat and any crystal additions. Apparently they used to, which lines up with the mythical “Whiteboard” photo. They used wheat for head retention and apparently about 200kg of crystal for a commercial mash (sorry, I can’t remember the batch size now). In the end the crystal addition was scrapped as it was so insignificant and the wheat scrapped now that they use “the best malt in Australia”. I guess because they can control the malting process so much more now they get the desired result without needing any other grains.
3- Milling
What surprised me the most was the way they mill their grain. Perhaps this isn’t a surprise to others, but it was new to me.
They use a hammer mill that crushes the grain and husks done to a flour. They mash this flour and extract 99% of the available sugars (apparently). Then they run it through a mash filter to separate the spent grain flour. A sparge occurs in the filter and then the wort is run into the kettle. When the sparge water conductivity drops below a set point, the weak wort (ot sparge water) is diverted off to the mash tun as the liquor for the next mash. In this way they get very high total efficiency.
4- Hops
No surprises here. Single addition Pride of Ringwood pellets in the kettle only.
5- Mash Temperatures
This is the step profile that the tour guide said they follow.
58* - protein rest
62* - 30 minutes
68* - 30 minutes
72* - mash out (transfer to mash filter)
6- Fermentation
No surprises here. Coopers yeast that is deliberately stressed to encourage ester production. I didn’t ask fermentation temps as it slipped my mind once the tasting began. We tasted every beer they produce with their logo and one Japanese lager as well, so that really did slow the questioning down a bit.
Anyway, I hope that’s helpful for anyone that was curious and wants to make this beer themselves. Now that Coopers malt is available to us home brewers it’s even easier to get close to this SA favourite.
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