Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Clonebrew: Pinkus Munster Alt Bier

My youngest son just turned 21 and while he isn't much of a drinker, he's fascinated by the process of brewing beer. As a sort of rite of passage of turning 21, he wanted to brew up a batch of beer rather than go hit the bars, and his choice of beer was a German Alt Bier.

Turning once again to my Clonebrew book, I found a recipe for Pinkus Munster Alt Bier which didn't seem exceedingly difficult. Like my Bitburger and Pilsner Urquell batches, this would be a small 2 ga. batch brewed in a Mr. Beer brewing keg.

TYPE: Ale
STYLE: Alt Bier (German)

Brew Date: 12 October 2010

Ingredients
Whole Grains
Munich Malt (2 oz.)

Malt Extract
Extra-light dry malt extract (0.6 lbs.)
Wheat dry malt extract (1.75 lbs.)

Hops
Bittering: Saaz (0.8 oz.)
Flavoring: Saaz (0.1 oz.)

Yeast
Wyeast #2007 German Ale Yeast

Procedure
Cracked whole grains by running over them several times with a rolling pin (not hard...you want them cracked, not crushed!) while about a quart of water was heating to 150F on the stove. Put the cracked grains in a grain bag and put in the hot water to steep and while that was steeping I got another pot with a quart of water to heat to 150F.

After 20 minutes of steeping, I put the grain water (now a nice amber color) into the brew pot and sparged the grain bag with the other quart of water. Added a couple more quarts of water to the brew pot and dumped all the DME into it, stirring while heating to a boil to get all the DME dissolved.

Added the bittering hops when the wort started to boil, and at 45 minutes into the boil added the flavoring hops.

Stopped the boil at 60 minutes and started adding ice and cold water to cool. Poured the wort into the fermenting keg and topped up with more cold water to the 2 gallon mark.

Pitched the yeast when temperature dropped below 80F.

Bottled the beer on 10/31, so I guess we'll call this the Halloween brew. Primed with 1/2 cup of the wheat DME dissolved in 1/2 cup of warm water. Drew a tiny sample into a clear glass and the color looks about right, although very cloudy (expected). Will give this about 10 days to condition in the bottle before first taste, on or about 11/11.

Update: Oddly enough, Wegman's grocery store here in town carries Pinkus Munster Alt Bier, so I picked up a couple bottles to compare against this batch. We put a couple of bottles in the fridge overnight and took our first taste as planned on 11/11. While not an exact duplicate of the real thing, it came surprisingly close, and was VERY tasty. The Pinkus beer has more of a banana note to it than ours, but who knows what ours will taste like if we let a couple bottles lager a bit longer. We'll call this one a win, and will likely brew it again.

Brewing, not blogging

Haven't done a lot of brewing and even less blogging about it since my last post over a year ago, but I did brew a couple batches in the intervening months with my old brewing buddy Rick. Our first run was an epic failure, attempting a double batch of the mini brew kegs which we seemed to have bottled way too early.

Before that one even bit the dust, we'd brewed another batch of our old standby, an Oktoberfest recipe which never failed us in the past. We timed the batch to be ready for my annual 4th of July bash, so we kegged it rather than bottling it. Our bottle supply was set aside for the batch which would ultimately fail, anyway.

The Oktoberfest batch came out good if not great, and I think it's because we primed with DME instead of the usual priming sugar. Will stick with priming sugar for that recipe from now on.

New post coming up with details on most recent batch.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Back to brewing

My aforementioned brewing buddy, Rick, has moved back to the area, and we're going to start brewing again. Now that I've had a taste of brewing lagers, I want to keep doing that, but I'll have to figure out the logistics of fermenting and conditioning a 5-gallon batch. I'm pretty sure my wife won't like the idea of taking over a good-sized chunk of our second fridge.

For the time being, we'll probably have to stick with ales until we can figure something out, so I'll probably have to stick with my small batches for lagers. I may get one of those batches in before Rick and I start brewing and I have to commit my swing-top bottles to those efforts.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Clonebrew: Pilsner Urquell

I decided it was time for another batch of beer and turned again to my copy of Clonebrews for the Pilsner Urquell recipe. If you've never had Pilsner Urquell (PU...heh), it's an awesome beer. It's the pilsner after which all other pilsners were copied, and it's said that PU was the first beer to be golden colored instead of dark. Pilsner Urquell is from Plzen (Pilsen) in the Czech Republic.

The procedure for this one would be similar to the Bitburger recipe, and in fact, the ingredients are similar, except for the hops. Once again, I had to make substitutions due to availability of some ingredients.

TYPE: Lager
STYLE: Pilsener (Czech)

Brew Date: 24 March 2007

Ingredients
Whole Grains
10.0L Crystal Malt (3.2 oz.)
10.0L Munich Malt (0.8 oz.)

Malt Extract
Extra Light dry malt extract (2.0 lbs.)
Light dry malt extract (0.4 lbs.)

Hops
Bittering: Saaz pellets 3.3% AA (1.5 oz.)
Flavoring: Saaz pellets (0.4 oz.)
Aroma: Saaz pellets (0.4 oz.)
Dry hop with fermentation: Saaz whole leaf (0.2 oz.)

Yeast
White Labs Pilsner Lager Yeast #WLP800

Procedure
The procedure was very similar to the previous batch, with the following differences in the hopping schedule:
Bittering hops at start of boil
Flavoring hops after 45 minutes
Aroma hops after 57 minutes
Stop boil at 60 minutes
Dry hops thrown into fermenter before closing it up
Screw-ups for this batch...right after the boil started, I turned to clean up some stuff and the pot boiled over. I don't think I lost too much wort, but we'll see. And once again, I pitched more than half of the vial of yeast. I can probably look forward once again to krauesen krud floating on top.

I didn't deviate significantly from the book's recipe, except I was stuck with 10L crystal malt instead of 2.5L. Our local store doesn't carry anything lighter than 10L in crystal malt. The recipe also calls for dry-hopping in the secondary fermenter after 5-7 days of primary fermentation. With this fermenting keg, I only do a single fermentation of 7 to 14 days, and since opening it up in the middle of fermentation invites contamination, I decided to take my chances with dry-hopping at the start. I don't know what effect that might have on fermentation, if any.

Saturday (4/7) I bottled the batch today, and managed to get 12 half-liter bottles out of it before the floating krauesen krud and hop cones got too close to the spigot. Since I had some issues with the last batch (see Clonebrew: Bitburger entry) that I think was related to over-carbonating owing to too much priming sugar, I cut the priming sugar per bottle way back. I only used a bit over half a teaspoon per bottle this time.

Targeting first taste for two weeks from now, 4/21.

A (very) belated update: This batch turned out great. As a result of the boil over, I lost some of the wort, and the end result was an inadvertent Pilsner Urquell Slightly Lite. Of course, I have no idea how much wort I lost, so I can't duplicate it.

I kept one bottle in the fridge for over a year and split it with my old brewing buddy when he was visiting and it was still a great-tasting beer with very nice color and clarity.

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Clonebrew: Bitburger

I've got a book called "Clonebrews" which has recipes for a bunch of commercial beers from around the world. Since Bitburger is my favorite, I had to take a run at it for my first batch. I had to improvise a bit due to availability of ingredients. I also had to adjust the quantities from those given in the book since the book assumes a 5-gallon batch and I'm brewing two gallons.

TYPE: Lager
STYLE: Pilsener (German)

Brew Date: 3 February 2007

Ingredients
Whole Grains
10.0L Crystal Malt (1.6 oz.)
10.0L Munich Malt (1.6 oz.)

Malt Extract
Light dry malt extract (2.4 lbs.)

Hops
Bittering: Northern Brewer hops 6.5% AA (0.4 oz.)
Flavoring: Perle (0.2 oz.)
Flavoring: Hallertau (0.1 oz.)
Aroma: Tettnang (0.1 oz.)

Yeast
White Labs Pilsner Lager Yeast #WLP800

Procedure
Started by spreading the whole specialty grains out and cracking them by running over them a few times with a rolling pin. While I was cracking the grain, I had a sauce pan on the stove heating about a quart of water to 150F. With the grain cracked, it all went into a large nylon grain bag, and the bag into the sauce pan.

Steeped the grains in the 150F water for 20 minutes (monitored the temp with a quick-read thermometer and alternately turned the flame on and off as needed to maintain 150F). Near the end of the steep, I got another quart of water in another pan heating to 150F.

At the end of 20 minutes, I removed the grain bag from the water. I folded the portion of the bag holding the wet grain over an empty segment of the bag (to minimize grain residue), then sparged the grain with the 150F water from the other sauce pan into the first pan.

With half a gallon of weak wort in the brew pot, I added the 2.4 lbs. of dry malt extract (DME) and added about another quart of water and turned up the heat to bring it to a boil. A note here about working with DME...it likes to clump up when added to the water. Be patient and keep stirring.

When the wort started to boil, I added the Northern Brewer bittering hops in a hop bag (always in a hop bag!).

At 45 minutes into the boil, I added the Perle flavoring hops.

At 50 minutes into the boil, I added the Hallertau flavoring hops.

At 55 minutes into the boil, I added the Tettnang aroma hops.

At 60 minutes, I removed the wort from the heat, letting it cool for 15 minutes.

Dumped the sanitizing solution out of the fermentation barrel and ran one gallon of cold water into it. I poured the still-hot wort into the barrel and topped to the fill line (8.5 quarts) with cold water from the kitchen sink sprayer to aerate the wort. Temperature showed just over 70F, so I pitched the yeast. Here's where I screwed up. The vial containing the yeast is intended for a 5 gallon batch, so my plan was to use a little less than half the vial. Instead I ended up using a little more than half. Shouldn't be a big problem.

The instructions on the yeast vial also called for taking it from the refrigerator 3-6 hours before pitching. I had it out for less than an hour. Oh well.

I let the barrel sit out at room temperature for about four hours before putting it in the wine fridge.

Checking the barrel the next day I saw no discernible signs of fermentation activity. So that evening (Sunday), I took the barrel out of the fridge and sat it on top over night.

Monday morning still showed no sign of fermentation, but there must have been some pretty active respiration and budding because there was a BIG layer of yeast sediment at the bottom. I put the barrel back in the fridge.

I checked again on Wednesday night, and saw a rich, thick layer of frothy yeast floating on top and noted a healthy beer smell when I opened the fridge. Fermentation must be going fine.

Friday (2/9) still had that frothy yeast floating on top (I thought lager yeast was supposed to be bottom fermenting?), so we'll leave it alone for now.

Saturday (2/10)...still got that thick layer of frothy yeast on top. Not sure what to do if this stuff doesn't start settling out.

Just re-read a portion of Charlie Papazian's The New Complete Joy of Home Brewing and was reminded that said frothy yeast on the top is called kraeusen. As long as it's there, fermentation is still active.

Sunday (2/11) Damn...still a lot of kraeusen on top. If anything it looks thicker.

Tuesday (2/13) Decided to ignore it yesterday and took a look today. That kraeusen krud shows no sign of abating. Here's a pic for context:


You should be able to make out the difference in color between the beer and the krud on top.

Thursday (2/15) OK...still way too much krud on top. I think I'm just gonna bottle this stuff up on Saturday regardless.

Saturday (2/17) Well, I bottled the batch today. I've got low confidence in the outcome. The taste was pretty yeasty, but then again I've got a cold so I can't really count on my sense of taste too much. The beer was very cloudy, but should clear up some as it conditions and lagers over the next few weeks. I primed each bottle with 1tsp. of priming sugar. Hopefully that'll be about right. Targeting Saturday, 3/10 for first taste. I'd normally give it two weeks, but I think I'll give this one three.

Friday (3/2) Decided to go ahead and try one. I put a couple in the fridge yesterday and popped one open after work today. I was careful opening it, since I was basically guessing on the priming sugar. In fact, I put the bottle under a cardboard box when I opened it. No explosions, no volcanic eruptions of foam. Cool.

So I grabbed a glass and poured it down the side letting it head just a bit. Hmmm...no chunks, nice color, fair head quality and retention. So far so good. A little whiff...pleasant malty aroma...maybe this batch isn't a total disaster after all. Now for a taste.

Holy crap! Quite possibly the best tasting beer I've ever made! No...definitely the best tasting beer I've ever made! A bit of malt sweetness followed by a good bite of hops.

I just might have to stock up on more swing-top bottles and brew larger batches of this stuff!

Wort up, man

Some years back, I used to brew beer with a buddy of mine. We made some pretty good stuff, as well as some truly god-awful crap. Well, my brewing buddy moved away and I stopped doing it. Not because I lost interest or because it's a two-man job, but because a five gallon batch of beer was more than I wanted to store for myself. Not only that, but I wanted to try my hand at brewing lagers, which requires cold fermentation and conditioning. Ales are fermented and conditioned at room temperature.

Well, this past Christmas, my wife got me a Mr. Beer home brewing kit. This kit is a sort of home brewing kit for dummies in that the recipe kits are all pre-hopped malt extract recipes which sort of negates the need for any brain activity during the brewing process. But what I really liked about the kit was the 2-gallon fermenting barrel. Not only could I now brew a reasonably-sized batch of beer, but the barrel would fit perfectly on the bottom of my wine fridge, which just happens to stay at a constant, lager yeast-friendly 50F. Yes!!

The kit came with a "West Coast Pale Ale" recipe kit, which I brewed up and bottled shortly after Christmas, and was ready to drink when I got home from my business trip to Asia at the end of January. The result wasn't bad, although a bit less hoppy than I would have expected. Two of the bottles (so far) have failed to carbonate, probably because I was less than precise when measuring the priming sugar at bottling time. Of those bottles that carbonated properly, the head is a bit weak and doesn't retain very well. But the color is very nice and the flavor is surprisingly good.

With that batch out of the way, I basically tossed all the other stuff that came with the kit and cleaned out the Mr. Beer barrel in preparation for my next batch.

This blog will be where I record my recipes, brewing procedures and results for each batch of beer I brew. So here, blog isn't short for "weblog". It's short for "Brewer's LOG".