What are you drinking right now?

The weather in Virginia has been the usual unpredictable Spring swings, but tonight is absolutely lovely out on the balcony. I have a mug of my home-mixed grapefruit hard seltzer. I didn't brew it, but I did make it so I feel like it counts :D cheers
20260424_220923.jpg
 
One more. This one from left field, for all the sour fans on the board. Hello?

Jester King Omniscience & Proselytism
Barrel aged sour refermented with strawberries.

This beer is briny, fruity, sour as heck and has an unmistakable aroma of Kalamata olives. :D

IMG_0350.jpeg
 
One more. This one from left field, for all the sour fans on the board. Hello?

Jester King Omniscience & Proselytism
Barrel aged sour refermented with strawberries.

This beer is briny, fruity, sour as heck and has an unmistakable aroma of Kalamata olives. :D

View attachment 34579
Sounds interesting, i really like sours
 
I bought 5 pounds of rye, havent used it yet because of mixed reviews, some say its harsh
When I visited @Bigbre04 he had a Rye IPA on tap, and the flavor was prominent and… different. Kind of different like old speckled hen is different, but not the same kind. One could call it harsh - I wouldn’t - but I can see how some may not find it delicious.

Might be worthy of a small batch, just to try.
 
Finally came across an example of a Rye IPA, so I bought one. It was between okay and good. Maybe not the best example of the style. Quite dark in color.
View attachment 34586
I bought 5 pounds of rye, havent used it yet because of mixed reviews, some say its harsh
When I visited @Bigbre04 he had a Rye IPA on tap, and the flavor was prominent and… different. Kind of different like old speckled hen is different, but not the same kind. One could call it harsh - I wouldn’t - but I can see how some may not find it delicious.

Might be worthy of a small batch, just to try.
I've experimented with probably the better part of 20-25 pounds of rye over the last year. Generally and dependent on what beer style you're tinkering with...
10-12% of the grist - flavor should be barely noticeable, but you should reap some extra head retention.
12-18% of the grist - flavor can manifest on the palate, again depending on style, intro, mid or finish. It will be a light spicy addition.
18-25% of the grist - flavor is noticeable in most light color beers; well, formerly light color because you'll start picking up a red hue from the rye with increasing amounts if it's anything more than a pale grist. In amber and darker expressions, the rye can hide a little more easily, like say a red ipa, brown or porter. Cascadian dark ale is a good fit.
25% + under 50% it's prominent but if you don't know what you're tasting, it's a curiosity. It can interfere with hops in a few ways. First, it can 'mute' perceived bitterness. Secondarily, as the percentage of the grist goes up, that spicy character can manifest on the finish and provide a 'bite' from the rye malt that does not always play well with hops that tend to tropical notes or citrus notes.
50%+ You have Roggenbier. It can have a very copper hue, malty and lots of spice on the palate. It's not like black pepper spice, more restrained but plays well with most noble hops.

The tricks to rye are how you mash with it and what you're using it for. I use it for a little character I find missing in some pale expressions, and some extra head retention. Mashing can be a chore in higher numbers with many recommending a beta-glucan rest. Honestly, I've gotten better results from single infusion adding rice hulls and a few dashes of beta-glucanase - h/t @Bigbre04

FWIW, I have it in https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/view/1621506/ic6cs-left-coast-ipa at just under 20%. It's too much and when I redo it, I will sub in peasant 2 row or pils. I was able to pick up the rye on the finish, at the same time as all those wonderful C hops and they shouldn't have any competition there. It's not harsh, or bad, and this is without a doubt my best W/C, I just want that canvas for the hops. Nobody else has picked up on that aspect or said anything about it so maybe I'm nitpicking.
 
@Donoroto @Dave Y

This is my rye pale ale

https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/embed/1607172

I liked it. it was not for everyone. i think i would have needed to compare a similar recipe without the rye side by side to be able to decern the actual rye character.

BUT this discussion did make me think it might be a cool addition to my basic golden lager in low levels. help with head and add a hint of spice. i currently add 12oz of choc malt (out of roughly 100lbs). Can i taste it? maybe??? but i think it brings something to the finish and the color.
 
@Donoroto @Dave Y

This is my rye pale ale

https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/embed/1607172

I liked it. it was not for everyone. i think i would have needed to compare a similar recipe without the rye side by side to be able to decern the actual rye character.

BUT this discussion did make me think it might be a cool addition to my basic golden lager in low levels. help with head and add a hint of spice. i currently add 12oz of choc malt (out of roughly 100lbs). Can i taste it? maybe??? but i think it brings something to the finish and the color.
you could sub in some cara-rye or optionally layer in some chocolate rye for a slight deviation.
Your RIPA is right up there at 20% with mine, and to my palate, right on the finish I get a distinct spicy character that would play well with Tettnanger, Saaz, maybe a little cascade but it's out of place with tropical or citrus notes you want in a good IPA. With the right hops it would work great at 20% - I have a previous recipe somewhere that played nicely but the IBUs weren't where I wanted.

It took me probably 3 or 4 brews with increasing amounts of rye to perceive the difference - I didn't have anything on tap as a baseline at the time. Now I know a bit more about what I'm looking for.
 
Finally came across an example of a Rye IPA, so I bought one. It was between okay and good. Maybe not the best example of the style. Quite dark in color.
View attachment 34586
We have a place in town that has one as part of their core beers. It is quite popular and good. I will taste a little here and there, but I don't normally drink it in the taproom. It isn't because I don't like it, it is because it is over 7%.
 
you could sub in some cara-rye or optionally layer in some chocolate rye for a slight deviation.
Your RIPA is right up there at 20% with mine, and to my palate, right on the finish I get a distinct spicy character that would play well with Tettnanger, Saaz, maybe a little cascade but it's out of place with tropical or citrus notes you want in a good IPA. With the right hops it would work great at 20% - I have a previous recipe somewhere that played nicely but the IBUs weren't where I wanted.

It took me probably 3 or 4 brews with increasing amounts of rye to perceive the difference - I didn't have anything on tap as a baseline at the time. Now I know a bit more about what I'm looking for.
this is the recipe i was talking about.

https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/embed/1427656

i wouldnt really want to taste it, but a little in the background could give it some interesting flavor? I am battling Head retention at this point. so i am going back and adding dextrin malt to things...maybe i get a bag of maltodextrose and throw that into the kettle to keep my enzymes from breaking it down................HMMMMMM that may be the ticket.
 
this is the recipe i was talking about.

https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/embed/1427656

i wouldnt really want to taste it, but a little in the background could give it some interesting flavor? I am battling Head retention at this point. so i am going back and adding dextrin malt to things...maybe i get a bag of maltodextrose and throw that into the kettle to keep my enzymes from breaking it down................HMMMMMM that may be the ticket.
Looking at that, I'd think about swapping out the chocolate for chocolate rye and --maybe-- throw in a very little cara-rye. I wouldn't want to see a major color change and I'd want to keep the percentage on the low side; 3-5% total maybe. closer to 3% as you've got a good recipe already.

do you just throw the chocolate malt in the whole mash or add it late? On the lower ABV beers it's a juggling act to get that last minute addition in the mash, usually mash out if I just want color, no roast, etc. On ambers, dark beers and beers in the 5.5%& up range, I can mash darker malts a little longer and not pick up too much unwanted character.
 

Back
Top