Any accomplished brewer will tell you fermentation is everything. I couldn't agree more, I think that most homebrewers don't understand how important fermentation is. There are a lot of factors that contribute to go good fermentation. The important things being, healthy yeast, nutrients, oxygen, temperature. The two most important things for me are healthy yeast and a constant fermentation temperature.
To get a healthy pitch of yeast, I first find the newest vial of white labs yeast. I think white labs dates there yeast out 90 days, but don't quote me on it. Next, I make a yeast starter. I built my own stir plate out of a computer fan, a switch, AC to DC converter and a some tuber-ware. I use a 1 liter flask, it is a bit small but it works really well. I make a 1.040 SG unhopped wort and pitch the yeast 18-24 hour before I pitch it in the fermentor. I also add a some yeast nutrient to the starter, I use Yeastex. The research I did, made me choose yeastex because it had all the necessary ingredients.
On brew day, once the wort has been chilled and transfered to the fermentor. I oxygenate with an O2 tank and aeration stone. I aerate lightly and shake the fermentor for 45 seconds and then I pitch the yeast.
From this point on, the process is out of my control. I have been very lucky with the location of fermentation area. I ferment mostly in glass carboys in the back of my garage. I have taken temperature readings and found out I see less then +/- 1 degree change over 24 hours. As far as the temperature, it depends on the season. During the winter I see 65F, spring it 68-69F, summer 72F and fall 70F.
The schudule of my fermentations is something I am very serious about and every beer recieves the same treatment. I have a two week rule. The two week rule is where the beer spends two weeks at every stage of fermentation and conditioning. For example, if I am making a DIPA. Two weeks in primary, two weeks secondary and then two weeks cold conditioning in a keg. For cold conditioning, I hook up the CO2 and set it to serving pressure and while it is conditioning. The beer is also carbonating.
I am very strict about and this schedule, it is just one part of my process. If I make changes to make the beer better, I don't change the process. I change the ingredients.
Friday, March 16, 2012
Monday, February 27, 2012
Insatiable Ale
My favorite beer of last year was my Insatiable Ale. This beer is just so good, I had people who don't even like beer, who couldn't put this beer down. This beer would just disappear from my keg-o-rator. My inspiration for this beer was Nelson from Alpine Beer Co. Nelson is my favorite IPA, it is such a different and interesting beer. Nelson is a rye IPA with nelson sauvin hops. I wanted to bring it down a notch and make a sessionable pale ale with a west coast flare. The nelson sauvin hops have such an amazing flavor, it has this berry flavor. Some describe it as grape-like or gooseberries, I wouldn't totally agree. I do see however, the relationship to a white wine grape. I have had a couple of other nelson sauvin and rye beers and they are always awesome. Something about the rye and nelson are just the perfect combo.
White Labs WLP001-California Ale
My goals for this beer is to make a sessionable west coast pale ale that really highlight the nelson sauvin hops. If you have read other posts on this blog, you know I love Marris Otter malt and know why I chose this as my base malt, there is also a little bit of speciality malt and 15% rye. To show off this awesome hop I used mostly nelson sauvin, but I never like using just one hop. I like to layer hops and I blend hops with similar profiles to achieve the profile that I want. Also with this hoppy beer, I hopped on the back and front ends of the boil. I like to mostly use warrior hops for bittering because it's bitterness profile is strong but smooth and doesn't linger. I wanted it a little bit rougher, so I added a bit of chinook to the mash to give it a bit of a bite.
Recipe Overview |
Wort Volume Before Boil: | 8.00 US gals | Wort Volume After Boil: | 6.50 US gals |
Volume Transferred: | 5.50 US gals | Water Added To Fermenter: | 0.00 US gals |
Volume At Pitching: | 5.50 US gals | Volume Of Finished Beer: | 5.00 US gals |
Expected Pre-Boil Gravity: | 1.043 SG | Expected OG: | 1.053 SG |
Expected FG: | 1.012 SG | Apparent Attenuation: | 76.4 % |
Expected ABV: | 5.5 % | Expected ABW: | 4.3 % |
Expected IBU (using Tinseth): | 38.1 IBU | Expected Color (using Morey): | 6.2 SRM |
BU:GU ratio: | 0.71 | Approx Color: | |
Mash Efficiency: | 70.0 % | ||
Boil Duration: | 90.0 mins | ||
Fermentation Temperature: | 64 degF |
Fermentables |
Ingredient | Amount | % | MCU | When |
UK Pale Ale Malt | 11.00 lb | 81.5 % | 5.1 | In Mash/Steeped |
US Rye Malt | 2.00 lb | 14.8 % | 1.1 | In Mash/Steeped |
US Victory Malt | 0.25 lb | 1.9 % | 1.1 | In Mash/Steeped |
US Aromatic Malt | 0.25 lb | 1.9 % | 0.7 | In Mash/Steeped |
Hops |
Variety | Alpha | Amount | IBU | Form | When |
US Chinook | 10.5 % | 0.50 oz | 12.2 | Loose Pellet Hops | In Mash |
US Warrior | 15.5 % | 0.25 oz | 12.9 | Loose Pellet Hops | First Wort Hopped |
NZ Nelson Sauvin | 12.5 % | 0.50 oz | 7.0 | Loose Pellet Hops | 10 Min From End |
US Centennial | 8.5 % | 0.25 oz | 2.4 | Loose Pellet Hops | 10 Min From End |
US Simcoe | 13.0 % | 0.25 oz | 3.7 | Loose Pellet Hops | 10 Min From End |
US Simcoe | 13.0 % | 0.50 oz | 0.0 | Loose Pellet Hops | At turn off |
US Centennial | 8.5 % | 0.50 oz | 0.0 | Loose Pellet Hops | At turn off |
NZ Nelson Sauvin | 12.5 % | 0.50 oz | 0.0 | Loose Pellet Hops | At turn off |
NZ Nelson Sauvin | 12.5 % | 1.00 oz | 0.0 | Loose Pellet Hops | Dry-Hopped |
US Centennial | 8.5 % | 0.50 oz | 0.0 | Loose Pellet Hops | Dry-Hopped |
US Simcoe | 13.0 % | 0.50 oz | 0.0 | Loose Pellet Hops | Dry-Hopped |
Yeast |
Water Profile |
Target Profile: | No Water Profile Chosen |
Mash pH: | 5.2 |
pH Adjusted with: | Unadjusted |
Total Calcium (ppm): | 51 | Total Magnesium (ppm): | 9 |
Total Sodium (ppm): | 30 | Total Sulfate (ppm): | 36 |
Total Chloride(ppm): | 17 | Total Bicarbonate (ppm): | 153 |
Mash Schedule |
Mash Type: | Full Mash |
Schedule Name: | Single Step Infusion (66C/151F) |
Step Type | Temperature | Duration |
Rest at | 151 degF | 60 |
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