Pre-Pro Pils
|
Classic American Pilsner
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.064 |
1.021 |
5.68 |
25.8 |
3.56 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.047 |
Efficiency: 75 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: 60 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 4/13/2013 6:17 PM |
Notes: |
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Bakke Brygg Scottish Peat Ale 25 L
|
Other Smoked Beer
|
25 Litres |
1.058 |
1.018 |
5.32 |
20.61 |
13.56 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 29 Litres |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.05 |
Efficiency: 77 |
Mash Thickness: 3 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.75 |
Primary
Temp: 18 ° C |
Priming Method: Sukkerlake |
Priming Amount: 5,5 g sukker/L |
Creation
Date: 6/24/2014 11:11 AM |
Notes: Mengden meske- og skyllevann du bør bruke kommer an på utstyret og metoden du brygger med. Som et anslag kan vi si at du kan bruke 20 l meskevann og 15,5 l skyllevann til dette ølet. Noen bryggemaskiner (f.eks. Speidel Braumeister) kan kreve større mengder meskevann. Sjekk alltid manualen på utstyret du bruker.
Mesking på 69 grader i 60 min. Utmesk på 77 grader i 5 min hvis du har mulighet til å øke temperatur i mesken.
Kjøl ned til 17 grader før pitching av gjær.
Gjæring på 18 grader til stormgjæring begynner å avta (typisk etter 3-5 dager). Øk deretter til 20 grader og hold resten av gjæringsperioden (totalt 14 dager).
Gjæralternativer: WLP001, WLP007, WLP051, Danstar Nottingham |
|
Joe's Sierra Nevada Pale Ale Clone
|
American Pale Ale
|
11 Gallons |
1.053 |
1.01 |
5.63 |
37.66 |
7.55 °L
|
4.6K |
6 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 13 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.045 |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 72 ° F |
Priming Method: NA |
Priming Amount: NA |
Creation
Date: 6/22/2015 7:52 PM |
Notes: Joe's Sierra Nevada Pale Ale clone.
-Heat up 13 gallons of water to 170*F.
-Initially pour two gallons of heated water into mashtun and add the crushed grain.
-add 5 more gallons of heated water carefully checking the temperature to ensure 150-160*F temperature. Stir grain bed really well to get an accurate temperature.
-Let Mash rest for 75 Mash minutes, periodically checking the temperature and stirring the mash.
-At 0 Mash minutes, begin sparging of wort. Ensure wort is clear of grains before allowing wort to fill in boiling kettle. Flow rate should be monitored. Entire wort volume should take ~ 40 minutes before boiling kettle is filled.
-keep mashtun from running dry as boiling kettle fills by adding the remaining 170*F water periodically.
-Bring Wort to a rolling boil, Boil for 60 minutes.
-Hops/additives additions:
*0.5 oz Magnum hops for 60 minutes
*1.0 oz Perle hops for 60 minutes
*1 whirfloc tablet or Irish moss added at 15 minutes.
*Wort chiller added at 15 minutes.
*2.0 oz Cascade hops for 15 minutes
*1.0 oz Cascade hops for 0 minutes
-Bring wort to room temperature using immersion coil/ wort chiller.
-transfer wort fermenters and aerate by vigorously mixing.
-sprinkle Safale US-05 and mix. Seal fermenters and set aside for 3-7 days or until airlock bubbles slow to 1-5 bubbles every 60 seconds.
-Move to secondary for 7 days.
*3.0 oz Cascade hops dryhopped for 4-7 days in secondary.
-Once the trub bed is settled and there is no airlock activity, the beer can be bottled or kegged.
Bottling will require you to boil a mixture of maltodextrin and water. Use priming calculator to determine amount of maltodextrin and water to boil.
If you are kegging your beer like myself, shoot for a volume of CO_2 Level of 2.6. Set regulator to 10.8-12 psi and kegerator temperature to 36-38*F. That should do it.
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Mystic Cat - Imperial English Barleywine (2.75 Gallon)
|
English Barleywine
|
2.75 Gallons |
1.199 |
1.042 |
20.61 |
83.8 |
27.33 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 5.1 Gallons |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.107 |
Efficiency: 52 |
Mash Thickness: 1 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 1.25 |
Primary
Temp: 65 ° F |
Priming Method: Dextrose |
Priming Amount: 1.75 |
Creation
Date: 7/7/2016 10:01 PM |
Notes: First off, you'll notice that I calculated this Barleywine at 52% brewhouse efficiency. The first time I brewed this recipe, I calculated it at 60% (I had never attempted anything like this before), but only got 52%. If you're using a cooler mash tun, you're going to want to pick up another cooler and split the mash between the two. If you do so, recalculate your efficiency accordingly.
Don't go with the standard 1.5 qt/lb water/grain ratio with this one. This is meant to be a chewy beer, so we're gonna go with 1 qt/lb in the mash. We'll do a full hour at 144°F to make sure the beta-amylase is happy. Still want some palatable malty sweetness, so raise it up to 158°F for 25 minutes and let the alpha enzymes do their thing. Mash out at 168°F.
Don't rush any of the processes or cut back on any expenses when you brew this beer. If you're going to attempt something like this, go hard or go home. Water chemistry, pH stabilizers, yeast nutrient, etc.; she deserves it all!
Note the 2-hour boil time.
The best way to ferment this is by collecting the yeast from a previous batch. You'll have a significantly higher cell count.
If this is your first time brewing this, you'll want to make two 1 Liter starters with the White Labs WLP099 Super High Gravity Ale Yeast. It's an English Ale that has fruity notes that shine through better at higher gravity points, so have fun with it.
*Pro-Tip: Make your second starter out of the boiling wort and dilute it down to 1.040 SG. It'll make the starter environment closer to the one you're pitching into*
Pitch the first starter slurry at 65°F after you aerate the crap out of the wort. For you carboy-shakers, that means 5 minutes of vigorous shaking. If you're worried about over-oxygenating your wort (which is pretty hard to do with a brew of this size), use the olive oil method by dipping the tip of a sanitized sewing pin into olive oil and stirring it into the chilled wort.
After 48 hours, hit this bad boy with another dose of oxygen to ensure maximum yeast reproduction and full attenuation (if you used the olive oil method, skip that step), then immediately pitch the second starter slurry (still at 65°F).
*Note: It's important to yell "SEND IN THE CALVARY!!!" when you pitch your second starter*
After primary fermentation starts to slow down a bit, melt 2 lbs of dextrose down into a simple syrup/caramel (DON'T BURN IT!), then pitch directly into the fermenter. You don't want to use too much water to make the syrup. Don't add the sugar at flame-out (like many recipes call for), because you want the yeast to chew through the maltose first, then let it get to the simple sugars. If you pitch the yeast after the dextrose, it will chew through the simple sugars first, and then be too tired to get through all of the maltose.
Primary fermentation at 65°F for 3-5 weeks. In the old days, the English Barleywine brewers would roll the barrels around the courtyard after primary fermentation to rouse the yeast. I like to go by tradition, so shaking the carboy at around the 4 week mark should do the trick. DO NOT SKIP THIS STEP! After rousing the yeast on my first batch, I saw a significant increase in activity over the next few days. Once you're sure primary activity is done, go ahead and move onto secondary fermentation. Make sure you save that yeast for another batch!
Secondary fermentation at at 68-69°F for 2-6 months (use a CO2 blanket if you want to be safe)
If you're bottling, use a priming solution made of 1.75 oz of priming sugar for a 2.75 gallon batch. Pitch this solution along with another 1/4 package of WLP099.
Give this beer a few months to condition before preliminary tasting. Don't babysit; let the yeast do the work for you. Trust me, you'll reap the rewards in the end.
Save a few bottles by cellaring at 55°F (lay the bottles on the side). Try to plan it out so that you open one bottle each year for the next 10 years, and watch the flavors develop. Save them for a special occasion (birthday, anniversary, your biannual air filter changing, etc.)
Happy Brewing and Cheers! |
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Austrian Caramel Lager
|
Munich Helles
|
5 Gallons |
1.051 |
1.013 |
5.05 |
23.91 |
12.47 °L
|
4.6K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: N/A |
Efficiency: 66 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: BIAB |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: N/A |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 3/11/2012 8:47 PM |
Notes: |
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AlmondJoy Porter (Extract)
|
Robust Porter
|
5 Gallons |
1.056 |
1.015 |
5.48 |
19.83 |
29.71 °L
|
4.6K |
3 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 2.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.113 |
Efficiency: 35 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: Extract |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: 72 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 11/9/2014 6:08 PM |
Notes: Steep grains in 1.5 gallons of water at 155ºF for 45 minutes. Rinse grains and remove.
Add 1 gallon of water plus the dry malt extracts and bring to a boil.
While boiling, add the hops per the hopping schedule.
Add Irish moss after 45 minutes of boiling.
Cool the wort to 75ºF and add to two gallons of cold water in primary fermenter and top off with cold water to make five gallons.
Pitch yeast and aerate well. Add toasted coconut (see below for prep). Ferment in primary for 5 days.
Rack to secondary and add toasted coconut (see below for prep) and cocoa nibs. Ferment for an additional 8 days.
Rack to bottling bucket and add almond extract and priming mixture. Bottle and condition in bottle for at least two weeks.
Toasted Coconut:
Spread .5 lbs of unsweetened coconut on to a large baking sheet and bake for 5-10 minutes at 325 degrees turning the coconut a few time. Sanitized with vodka for at least 15 minutes before adding to primary or secondary. I use vanilla vodka for this recipe. |
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Belgian Marmalade Wit
|
No Profile Selected |
10.5 Gallons |
1.059 |
1.014 |
5.88 |
15.13 |
4.95 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 12 Gallons |
Boil Time: 75 |
Boil Gravity: 1.052 |
Efficiency: 75 |
Mash Thickness: 1.36 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 68 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 2/14/2016 5:47 PM |
Notes: Cereal Mash: Bring 1/2 of mash water to boil. Add All crushed Wheat (note the American Wheat is Raw Red Hard Wheat) and Oats to gelatinize for 15 to 30 min. Then add gelatinized wheat and oats to main Mash, target = 154F for 45 min.
Main Mash: Using 1/2 mash water, Mash crushed barley at 122F until Cereal added then 154 for 45 minutes. Add 1 lb Rice Hulls (Critical with Cereal Mash) and stir and place into Lauter Tun. Sparge and collect 12 to 12.5 Gallons. Boil til 10.5 Gallons. Add no finings. Note Add 13oz Marmalade at 5 min and 1.5oz Crushed Coriander at 1 min. In secondary added 2 Orange Zest and 0.5oz Crushed Coriander. This beer is Fantastic. Best Wit I have ever made.
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Red Headed Stranger
|
Flanders Red Ale
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.07 |
1.017 |
6.88 |
17.59 |
18.29 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 8 Gallons |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.048 |
Efficiency: 65 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: 67 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 8/30/2014 7:09 PM |
Notes: Gold medal winner at NHC 2014 (see Zymurgy Sept/Oct 2014 page 70)
I entered the fermentables and then back-calculated the efficiency to match the reported OG. Doing this, I arrived at 65%
The fermentation schedule goes like this:
1. Primary fermentation with 1056 at 67F for 7 days
2. Transfer to secondary and pitch lambic blend, ferment either 90 days or 1 year (the recipe contradicts itself here) between 62-78F
3. Transfer to tertiary fermentor on top of eight 14.5oz cans of Oregon tart cherries. Age three months until clear (temperature not specified).
4. Pitch champagne yeast to bottle condition (gravity should be about 1.008 at this point) |
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Smoked Porter
|
Classic Style Smoked Beer
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.072 |
1.018 |
7.11 |
35.34 |
41.28 °L
|
4.6K |
2 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.053 |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.5 |
Primary
Temp: 67 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 7/24/2016 4:12 PM |
Notes: |
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Red Racer Clone
|
American IPA
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.07 |
1.017 |
6.92 |
110.52 |
15.34 °L
|
4.6K |
5 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 8 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.048 |
Efficiency: 72 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: BIAB |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: N/A |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 4/4/2016 6:11 PM |
Notes: |
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Guapo Guava IPA
|
American IPA
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.061 |
1.015 |
5.93 |
63.04 |
6.82 °L
|
4.6K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.19 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.043 |
Efficiency: 79 |
Mash Thickness: 1.75 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 68 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 2/1/2019 3:37 PM |
Notes: |
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Goose Island Honkers Ale Clone
|
Ordinary Bitter
|
11 Gallons |
1.047 |
1.014 |
4.3 |
31.23 |
8.79 °L
|
4.6K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 12 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.043 |
Efficiency: 81 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: N/A |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 11/8/2017 9:18 PM |
Notes: |
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Gingerbread Porter
|
Baltic Porter
|
5 Gallons |
1.077 |
1.019 |
7.68 |
38.03 |
30.32 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
Author:
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Brew Cat
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|
Boil
Size: 6 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.062 |
Efficiency: 80 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 65 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 11/30/2016 5:00 PM |
Notes: This is a good winter beer IMO. Drink it in a 10 oz tulip glass. You can tweak the spices to your taste. Next time I may back off the nutmeg and up the Ginger. This ratio was from my wife's gingerbread recipe
Of course you could change up the yeast. As with most spiced ales it ages well. I brewed it last year to drink it the following year so bottle conditioning may be appropriate
(Edit) the above recipe was edited with regards to the spices the ginger is the same reduce everything else |
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AAA
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American Amber Ale
|
21 Litres |
1.038 |
1.007 |
4.11 |
32.95 |
7.01 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 28.5 Litres |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.028 |
Efficiency: 65 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: BIAB |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: 22 ° C |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 12/19/2013 10:47 AM |
Notes: |
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Lion Stout Clone
|
Foreign Extra Stout
|
1 Gallons |
1.076 |
1.013 |
8.24 |
55.46 |
50 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 1.7 Gallons |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.045 |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 68 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 5/16/2016 8:20 PM |
Notes: If jaggery is available then use 6 oz as a substitute for the sugars in the fermentables. |
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Hidden Hands - Cascara Wheat Wine
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Wheatwine
|
395 Litres |
1.094 |
1.013 |
10.58 |
57.28 |
10.86 °L
|
4.6K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 405 Litres |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.091 |
Efficiency: 75 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: N/A |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 11/12/2015 5:11 PM |
Notes: 365 L @ 167 F MASH
16lb of Cascera at 20 min in boil
1 lb of Cinnamon sticks at 10 minutes of boil |
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Hoegaarden Wit Clone
|
Witbier
|
18 Litres |
1.05 |
1.013 |
4.94 |
8.97 |
4.09 °L
|
4.6K |
2 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 22 Litres |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.041 |
Efficiency: 65 |
Mash Thickness: 3.2 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 18 ° C |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 8/1/2018 9:31 AM |
Notes: |
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Marzen-Octoberfest
|
Oktoberfest/Märzen
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.057 |
1.014 |
5.57 |
20.98 |
7.1 °L
|
4.6K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: N/A |
Efficiency: 78 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: 49 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 6/23/2013 6:33 PM |
Notes: mash volume 3.5 gallons
batch sparge volume 4.5 gallons
Ferment @ 49 for 2 weeks
D.rest @ 65 48 hours
Lager @ 35 2-4 months |
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Black Forest Cake Stout Clone
|
Imperial Stout
|
5 Gallons |
1.091 |
1.03 |
7.94 |
37.5 |
50 °L
|
4.6K |
2 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.073 |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: N/A |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 9/5/2019 3:57 AM |
Notes: https://byo.com/article/pastry-beers/
Imprint Beer Co.’s Black Forest Cake Stout clone
(5 gallons/19 L, all-grain)
OG = 1.100 FG = 1.028
IBU = 65 SRM = 69 ABV = 9.6%
Ingredients
15.5 lbs. (7 kg) American 2-row pale malt
1.5 lbs. (0.68 kg) Munich malt
1 lb. (0.45 kg) Carafoam® malt
1 lb. (0.45 kg) British chocolate malt (350 °L)
1 lb. (0.45 kg) British crystal malt (65 °L)
1 lb. (0.45 kg) roasted barley
12 oz. (0.34 kg) Carafa® Special III
3 lb. (1.4 kg) Vintner’s Harvest sweet cherry puree
16 AAU Magnum hops (90 min.) (1 oz./28 g at 16% alpha acids)
1.5 lbs. (0.68 kg) Cholaca liquid cacao (original flavor) or 12 oz. (0.34 kg) toasted Ecuadorian cacao nibs
5 Madagascar vanilla beans
Wyeast 1968 (London ESB) or White Labs WLP002 (English Ale) or Lallemand London ESB English-Style Ale yeast
2⁄3 cup corn sugar (if priming)
Step by step
Several days before brewday, scrape open and cut the 5 vanilla beans into 1-inch (2.5-cm) segments and soak in vodka or Bourbon until ready to add to the secondary.
Mill the grains and mix with 6.8 gallons (25.7 L) of 167 °F (75 °C) strike water to reach a mash temperature of 155 °F (68 °C). Hold this temperature for 60 minutes. If you have soft water, you may want to hold off on adding the roasted grains and British crystal malts until the final 15 minutes of the mash. Vorlauf until your runnings are clear. Sparge the grains with enough water to obtain 7 gallons (26.5 L) of wort. At this point, you may want to test the wort’s gravity. The goal should be to have 7 gallons (26.5 L) of 1.072 SG wort at the start of the boil. You can add dried malt extract (DME) at this point if the SG is low or you may want to wait until the beer is in the fermenter. If you wait to add the DME, be sure to add it after fermentation begins to calm down.
Boil the wort for 90 minutes or more, adding hops according to the ingredient list. After the boil, turn off heat and chill the wort to slightly below fermentation temperature, about 65 °F (18 °C). Aerate the wort with pure oxygen or filtered air and pitch yeast. There should be 5 gallons (19 L) of cooled wort in the fermenter. Be sure to have room in your fermenter for the cherry puree.
Ferment at 66 °F (19 °C) for 10 days (adding the fruit puree on day 6), then raise the temperature to 70 °F (21 °C) for 3–4 days. Carefully rack into a secondary vessel containing Cholaca/cacao nibs and vanilla extract, and age to desired taste. Crash the beer to 35 °F (2 °C) for 48 hours. Bottle or keg the beer and carbonate to approximately 2.25 volumes. |
|
1 Gallon Everyday IPA
|
American IPA
|
1 Gallons |
1.058 |
1.01 |
6.38 |
101.98 |
9.8 °L
|
4.6K |
3 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 3 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.019 |
Efficiency: 53 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: BIAB |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 68 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 4/5/2016 5:43 AM |
Notes: Not nearly enough water. Used Brooklyn brewing book recipe. Started with 6.5 quarts. Should have had more because I increased the grain by 25% because I decided to do no sparge. Followed recipe except added some Amarillo hops I had laying around for a big aroma.
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