thats a great looking reciepe hairofthedog. cant wait for it.
although id love to know how your measuring 7g of zest. i love to see that :lol:
I'll be brewing this tomorrow for the case swap.
Using an US dry yeast for this.
SNPA Clone
American Pale Ale
Type: All Grain
Date: 8/10/2008
Batch Size: 24.61 L
Boil Size: 32.45 L Asst Brewer:
Boil Time: 70 min Equipment: My Equipment
Taste Rating(out of 50): 35.0 Brewhouse Efficiency: 77.00
Taste Notes:
Ingredients
Amount Item Type % or IBU
5.22 kg Pale Malt, Ale (Barrett Burston) (5.9 EBC) Grain 92.01 %
0.45 kg Crystal Malt - 60L (Thomas Fawcett) (118.2 EBC) Grain 7.99 %
19.00 gm Horizon [11.00 %] (70 min) Hops 21.6 IBU
19.00 gm Pearle [6.00 %] (30 min) Hops 8.8 IBU
40.00 gm Cascade [5.50 %] (10 min) Hops 8.0 IBU
56.70 gm Cascade [5.50 %] (0 min) Hops -
Beer Profile
Est Original Gravity: 1.056 SG
Measured Original Gravity: 1.010 SG
Est Final Gravity: 1.014 SG Measured Final Gravity: 1.005 SG
Estimated Alcohol by Vol: 5.39 % Actual Alcohol by Vol: 0.65 %
Bitterness: 38.4 IBU
Est Color: 18.4 EBC
oops.....this was going to be a SNPA clone but after stuffing up the 56gm of Cascade for flameout and adding them at the 30min instead of the Pearle it looks like it will be a standard APA.
Damn..was looking forward to trying this. Suppose there is always next week.
I'll post the final recipe change up later.
cheers
johnno
Haha, HairOfDog, where are the references for the stolen material on zest you tried to pass off. lol
OK. The brew I submitted was my 2nd All Grain brew. I was going for an Australian Pale Ale. Not sure what that's supposed to be though. I just assumed it was Aussie grain with Aussie hops (think galaxy is Aussie), so let's just say that I was making a "Pale Ale that I liked" (hopefully).
So, the ingredients were:
7.5 kg Pale Malt, Traditional Ale (Joe White)
0.5 kg Carared (Weyermann)
0.5 kg Munich, Light (Joe White)
25gram Millenium (60 min(start of boil))
20gram Millenium (15 min)
20gram Millenium (0 min)
1.5 Irish Moss Tablets (10 min)
1 soup spoon honey (actually from memory, I think I ran out, and there was less in this, not sure)
Safale yeast US05
I mash with a 75 Litre Techni Ice esky, with a copper tubing in the bottom for filtering.
Mash in 22L at 72C
-Hold Mash at 66 for 90 min (it was probably a little higher to start with, as I was still working it all out, 68'ish)
Mash out 15L at 95C for 2 min
Sparge with 18L at 75C for 10 min
Put in fermenter, and wait, then take OG. I didn't wait long enough! I shrivelled and melted my Hydrometer container, so I'm not sure what the OG was on this brew.
Wait 1 day for wort to cool, then add yeast.
II think I fermented around 18-22 depending on the days, but it seemed to stay around 19. think I racked after 10 days. Then bottled 3-4 days later. From memory it was 1008-1010 final gravity. Not sure. So since no OG, I dont know how strong it was. But seems around 4.5->5.5%.
Hope you all find it nice. It was my second all grain brew, with all new(well, home-made) equipement. Hope I can find out what this "Diacetyl" thing is, and try and make some without it, to see the difference. But from what I see when I google it, it is described as a "buttery" or "butterscotch" flavour, which sounds good to me. It also seems to be the ingredient that they put into margarine to make it taste like butter. Please correct me if I'm wrong there. But, is it something I do? Something I add? Or some sort of infection(as some don't seem to like it)? However, I liked it. I usually drink them pretty quick as they don't last long here unfortunately. I see online that some people do a Diacetyl rest, so maybe I need to try that. Anyway, I hope others enjoy it. It's just trying to be a nice after work quaffable pale ale.
Hope that was readable, as I've had a couple of swaps now!
For your "second" brew you have done well, butterscotch, popcorn (diacetyl) is probably more common in a lager than an ale. No not something you add. No not an infection, can be the by-product of though. I have had it many times, #1 I stopped pitching willy nilly and pitched at fermentation temp #2 Kept the primary happening longer 21 days+. Just these simple things along with healthy yeast, avoiding long lag times has helped me avoid this unwanted taste.
BTW, i LOVED THE BREWING COMMENTARY, the hi-lites had me rolling :lol:
Hi All,
Here's the recipe for #10 Belgian Witbier
Ingredients:
3 kg Pale Malt
7 kg Wheat Malt
4 kg Raw Wheat
2 kg Rice Hulls
60g Pride of Ringwood hops pellets full boil
60g Coriander seeds (crushed) 20 min from the end
Peel of 3 oranges (bruised) 20 min from the end
16 Cardamon pods (crushed) 20 min from the end
40g Goldings hop pellets 20 min from the end
28g Fuggles hop pellets at the end
1 teaspoon Irish Moss
Wyeast #3944 Belgian Wit yeast.
Batch size: 50L
Mashed at about 65 degrees
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