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Just in from the Storm
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The syrup i mean is the Rose's lime juice mentioned by kaisersozei. Cestes are (not sure if it is the correct english word, im Dutch ) scrapings of the peel of a lemon. I wouldent go down into the the high 3's for the yeasting part tho a steady drop from around 5 to around 4.2 is a much healthier enviroment for most yeast cultures. What yeast are you planning on usng Bottom fermenting or top fermenting? |
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#3 |
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Ah, I guess I didn't realise that Rose's lime juice was a syrup, I was assuming it was juice. Shows how many mixed drinks I make, I guess.
The english word you're looking for is "zest". That's what landhoney originally talked about using. Beer finishing in the high 3s pH isn't uncommon, but my point is that it would take a whole lot of zest to get enough citric acid to make the wort too acidic for the yeast. Being that he's talking about an India Pale Ale, one can safely assume he's talking about an ale yeast, or top fermenting. With the citricy hops, it'll be more american style, so the default choice would be Fermentis US-05/Wyeast 1056/White WLP001. It's a relatively clean, neutral yeast. |
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#4 | ||
Just in from the Storm
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Foam stability, protein binding .. But then again it could easily be me thinking to pure, i mainly deal with pilseners and the standards we use for that. Still sounds like an intresting brew! |
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#5 |
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Yeah, coming from a large brewery standpoint, I can understand. Lagers tend to be higher pH than ales. Hell, some of the sours will get down close to 3.0. I don't tend to think in large brewery terms, just the fact that you make such a clean product and make it so consistently is mind boggling.
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#6 |
The Homebrew Hammer
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Racked the CohiBrew DIPA into the secondary last week, SG right at about 1.019 so it fermented down quite a bit.
Yesterday I brewed up my 2010 Christmas ale, this year going for a Belgian Specialty using Trappist yeast and adding some cinnamon, orange peel, cardamon and ginger. Have a question for the group on calculating OG. I plan on adding dark Belgian candy sugar to the primary a few days after fermentation begins. I'm trying to determine how much to use, based on the impact it will have on the starting gravity. From what I've read, the sugar has a gravity of 1.036 OG/lb/gal. I measured OG this morning (without the sugar) at 1.060, a few points lower than target. Is it safe to say that 16 oz would bring that to 1.067 (1.036/5) and 8 oz to 1.064 (50% of 1.036/5)? This is in a 5 gallon batch.
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#7 |
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Kaisersozei, assuming the 36 points potential is correct and that you have exactly 5 gallons in the fermenter, then yes, your math is correct.
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#9 |
Have My Own Room
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Not a lot of information out there on exactly what sugars will do what from what I can see.
I did find this in an old thread on HBT... 1 pound of sugar will add .046 points per gallon. so 1 pound will add .0092 points to a five gallon batch. Formula: (.046 * "lbs of sugar") / "batch size in gallons" = "total extra points per batch" This question is still unanswered though: "Does this apply for any kind of sugar or is this just white sugar? I know some folks use turbinado cane, corn sugar, honey, etc." ** EDIT** Beersmith is giving me .044-.048/lb. if I'm looking at that correctly (looks like .046 falls right in there)**
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Pretending to play golf since 1989 Last edited by St. Lou Stu; 08-09-2010 at 01:52 PM. |
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#11 |
The Homebrew Hammer
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Well, I got some good news this morning!
Two years ago I used a DFH 90m IPA clone recipe to brew a beer that came out more like DFH Burton Baton. After two years in the bottle, it was probably more like a barleywine than a DIPA but I thought the ABV was a bit off. I decided to enter it in this year's Dominion Cup (a pretty sizeable homebrew competition in Virginia that draws entries from all over.) The results came out today and Asylum Imperial IPA placed second in the "IIPA, Barleywines, Old Ales" category! http://dominioncup.jrhb.org/DomCupWinners2010.php ![]() ![]() ![]() Should be getting the score sheets back this week, will be interested to see the judges' notes!
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#12 | |
Mr. Charisma
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![]() Brewed 10 gallons of Oktoberfest on Sunday, 5 gal regular and 5 gal with pumpkin (canned and baked) and spices (cinnamon, ginger, allspice, nutmeg) for a fall/halloween/thanksgiving Pumpkin Beer. This is my second batch of Oktoberfest this year for our Oktoberfest party at the end of October (figure this batch will be done at the end of the month, and then two months of lagering will be fine). The first one I brewed towards the end of April is awesome, and still a lot left for the party.
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Fields (to a heckling youngster): You're about to fall heir to a kitten stocking. Kid: What's a kitten stocking? Fields: A sock on the puss! Last edited by landhoney; 08-10-2010 at 09:40 AM. |
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#13 | |
The Homebrew Hammer
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![]() ![]() He loved it, scoring 46/50! On flavor he said: "Great hop character, suspect burst hopping (which I did ![]() ![]() I'd be happy to share the recipe (partial mash) if anyone wants to try it out. Gerard
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#14 |
Gonna make you groove...
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I'm just wrapping up brewing a hefeweizen.
6 lbs wheat LME .5 lbs carapils .5 lbs cara 20 1 oz Tettnaner 60 mins 1 oz Amarillo 15 mins Wyeast 3068 Weihenstephaner IBU's = 30 SRM = 7 abv = 4.7% I'll tell you in a few weeks how it turned out! ![]()
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"We live in the good of this." |
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#15 |
The Homebrew Hammer
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Bottled "CohiBrew" on Saturday, my latest DIPA recipe, and racked my Belgian Christmas Ale to the secondary yesterday. Added some Saaz hops, whole cloves & cinnamon, will get a little vanilla extract in a few weeks at bottling time. Tasted pretty darn good right out of the primary, so this one should be
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#16 |
Gonna make you groove...
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I've got some water warming up right now for a partial mash "big" vanilla porter I'm making. Drinking some Surly Cynic Ale and listening to the Brian Setzer Orchestra.
9 lbs gold LME 1 lb Crystal 60 1 lb Chocolate 1 lb Brown Malt .5 lb Aromatic .5 Oat Malt ** 1.084 OG 1 oz Tettnanger 60 mins .5 oz columbus 15 mins Wyeast 1028 London Ale The "Brew Your Own" calculator says this should come in at 1.028 FG, 8.1 abv, and 42 IBU's. I'll add some madagascar vanilla beans to the secondary.
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"We live in the good of this." |
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#17 | |
Gonna make you groove...
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I had a pretty big brewing day today. I had a couple buddies over and we brewed a nut brown ale, and we bottled my Bourbon Vanilla Porter. It finished with a gravity of 1.020, so it's 8.5% abv. Tasted really nice. I added about 8 oz of bourbon that had been infused with 2 vanilla beans.
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"We live in the good of this." |
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#18 |
Gonna make you groove...
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My porter seems to be chugging away nicely tonight. The OG came in a bit high at 1.088. My temp went a little high when I did my mini-mash, so I think that caused my OG to run a little high as well. Hopefully it won't be too tannic.
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"We live in the good of this." |
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