looks and sounds amazing. this will be my next brew too.hwall95 said:Originally was aiming to make a mild but changed it to an ordinary bitter. Kegged it 24 hrs ago and has cleared well.
3% and dry hopped it with 35g EKG. Tasting great and damn enjoyable for a low strength ale
Just saw this. Have a batch tucked away in the garage since Aprilish.Batz said:My Flanders Red, brewed early March 2015. First pour today, it's been a long wait but worth it. Very nice if I say so myself. Sourness well and truly there of course but perfectly balanced. I've brewed a few sour's now but this one really hits the mark, and it was my first as well.
Kegged this one wagga. But kept a healthy starter of it, I had added many sour bottle dregs. It's Batz culture now.waggastew said:Just saw this. Have a batch tucked away in the garage since Aprilish.
Did you end up kegging of bottle carbing Batz? If bottling how did you go about it I.e priming rates etc
The beer you make before the beer you want is often better, purely based on lower expectations.droid said:this stout was made for the yeast cake and it's turned out to be a bloody not bad drop. not a huge fan of bitter roast or harsh roast in stouts, this one has oats and chocolate extract with some liquorice as well - it tastes like a chico lolly! who'd av thunk it
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With ice blocks :chug:Kingy said:My 6month old blueberry mead was hard to drink a few months ago but now it's beautiful at 8% mixed with my ginger beer (also 8%) 3rd schooner. Oh god look out.ImageUploadedByAussie Home Brewer1480660836.780036.jpg
I tried a 'Modus Operandi' 'Wippa Snipa IPA' and was blown away by the hop aroma and flavour, showed up how far my brewing has to go... I thought there must be a fair bit throughout the process that i was missing to get that kind of flavour... Then I tried a friends brew at the last club meet and it had a similar (although not quite as intense) hop flavour and aroma. He said all that he had done to achieve it was a 30g keg hop for 3 days....Mardoo said:DIPA, brewed together with mofox1. As I move my way towards pressurised fermenting, I dry-hopped this under low pressure - about 55 KPA/8 PSI. This is the first time I've been able to get even close to the hop presence of the commercial IPAs. I am happier with this IPA than I ever have been. Fist pump!!! And yes, that's hop and likely some yeast cloudiness from the Conan/Vermont IPA yeast.
I've figured for a while that the most glaring difference process-wise between commercial IPAs and mine has been oxygen exclusion from kettle to serving. (There are of course other things to tend to, but this one's the most fun.) That's been my main driver towards fermenting, etc under pressure. I still need to sort out hop exclusion when transferring to the serving keg, as a few bits got through. Until I have a way to dump yeast and hops, I'll have to find some other way. I'm not willing to go full-filtration ATM.
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I like how you made the bottle levitateKumamoto_Ken said:Had to knock off early to collect the kids from the bus stop.
Shocking afternoon for it...the things a man does for his family.
'merican Wheat.
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