Founders Porter
|
Robust Porter
|
5 Gallons |
1.071 |
1.018 |
6.95 |
52.28 |
29.07 °L
|
1.9K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 6 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: N/A |
Efficiency: 75 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
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: 5/2/2013 9:41 PM |
Notes: Mash at 157
Use balanced water profile
Target .7 IBU/OG
Mash 6gal with 1/2tsp CaCl2, 1/2tsp Epsom Salt, 2tsp Baking Soda |
|
Rhyme & Reason
|
American Pale Ale
|
6 Gallons |
1.054 |
1.01 |
5.81 |
45.24 |
6.96 °L
|
1.9K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 4.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 30 |
Boil Gravity: 1.072 |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: 1.3 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: 68 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 9/19/2016 2:25 PM |
Notes: would like to add something to darken the colour |
|
Brock's Pale Ale
|
American Pale Ale
|
24 Litres |
1.046 |
1.008 |
4.98 |
36.87 |
5.15 °L
|
1.9K |
9 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 30 Litres |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.037 |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: 3 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.75 |
Primary
Temp: 18 ° C |
Priming Method: dextrose |
Priming Amount: 141.2 g |
Creation
Date: 9/5/2019 5:52 PM |
Notes: |
|
Double Sunshine
|
Double IPA
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.073 |
1.012 |
7.97 |
93.02 |
4.95 °L
|
1.9K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.051 |
Efficiency: 75 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.5 |
Primary
Temp: 68 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 4/1/2016 1:57 AM |
Notes: Lawson’s Double Sunshine IPA Recipe
Published: 2016-03-29
Sean Lawson, owner of Lawson’s Finest Liquids, a small-batch brewery based in Warren, Vermont, shared this recipe for their Double Sunshine IPA, which is packed with juicy tropical fruit flavors and bright herbal aromas thanks to the abundance of U.S. grown hops.
ALL-GRAIN
Batch size: 5 gallons (19 liters)
OG: 1.074
FG: 1.013
IBUs: 100+
ABV: 8%
MALT/GRAIN BILL
8.5 lb (3.85 kg) 2-row pale ale malt
12 oz (340 g) Carapilsen malt
2.5 lb (1.1 kg) Vienna-style malt
1 lb (454 g) flaked oats
6 oz (170 g) Caramunich-type malt
HOPS & ADDITIONS SCHEDULE
0.75 oz (21 g) Columbus [14% AAU] at 60 minutes
1 oz (28 g) Citra [12.5% AAU] at 20 minutes
1 lb (454 g) corn sugar at 10 minutes
3 oz (85 g) Citra [12.5% AAU] at 5 minutes
3 oz (85 g) Citra [12.5% AAU] at knockout
3 oz (85 g) Citra [12.5% AAU] at dry hop
YEAST
Fermentis Safale US-05, Lallemand BRY-097, Wyeast 1056 (American Ale), or White Labs WLP001 (California Ale)
DIRECTIONS
Single infusion mash: Achieve a target mash of 152°F (67°C). Hold for 45 minutes, then raise to mash-out temperature and begin lauter phase.
Collect enough wort to boil 6.5 gallons (24.6 liters) and boil for 60 minutes, following the hops and additions schedule. After the boil is complete, begin a whirlpool in the kettle and let the knockout hops rest in the hot wort for at least 30 minutes before chilling.
Chill the wort rapidly to 68°F (20°C). Ferment at 68°F (20°C) for one week. Cool to 55°F (13°C) to settle the yeast. Dump the yeast from the bottom of the fermentor or rack to a clean, sanitized vessel. Add the dry hops and let the beer sit for an additional four to seven days at 55–57°F (13°C).
EXTRACT VERSION
Replace the 2-row and Carapilsen malts with 6 pounds (2.7 kg) of light liquid malt extract. Mix the crushed Vienna-style malt, flaked oats, and Caramunich-type malt into 2 gallons (7.6 liters) of water to achieve a temperature of 152°F (67°C). Hold at this temperature for 45 minutes.
Rinse the grains with 2.5 quarts (2.6 liters) of hot water, add the liquid extract, and bring to boil. Top off the kettle to 6.5 gallons (24.6 liters). Boil for 60 minutes, following the hops schedule and adding 1.5 lb (680 g) of corn sugar with 10 minutes left in the boil. Continue as directed above.
Whether you like to brew over-the-top hops bombs or prefer the subtle pleasures of a British pub ale, discover how to build your own beer recipes from the ground up with CB&B’s online course, Intro to Recipe Development. Sign up today.
AUTHOR: SEAN LAWSON |
|
Brygghus 9: Tropical Tommy 25L
|
American Pale Ale
|
27.5 Litres |
1.056 |
1.011 |
5.96 |
47.64 |
6.79 °L
|
1.9K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 30 Litres |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.051 |
Efficiency: 82 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.75 |
Primary
Temp: 18 ° C |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 6/7/2016 1:02 PM |
Notes: |
|
Dortmund Lager
|
Dortmunder Export
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.055 |
1.009 |
6.13 |
26.88 |
7.72 °L
|
1.9K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.041 |
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: 10/24/2017 11:52 AM |
Notes: |
|
Young's Special London Ale Clone
|
Ordinary Bitter
|
5 Gallons |
1.074 |
1.023 |
6.66 |
26.57 |
11.22 °L
|
1.9K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 6.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.057 |
Efficiency: 75 |
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: 6/6/2019 5:27 PM |
Notes: |
|
Simple IPA
|
American IPA
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.065 |
1.018 |
6.16 |
49.76 |
12.16 °L
|
1.9K |
0 |
|
Author:
|
|
|
|
Boil
Size: 6 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: N/A |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 64 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 2/25/2013 7:21 AM |
Notes: will need up to .5 gallon top off water using 7 gallon kettle |
|
Jeremy's Oatmeal Stout
|
Oatmeal Stout
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.069 |
1.023 |
6.07 |
15.42 |
40 °L
|
1.9K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.051 |
Efficiency: 65 |
Mash Thickness: 1.25 |
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: 11/8/2014 9:26 PM |
Notes: Description: Going for a nice, smooth, thick, kinda-chocolate'y oatmeal stout with a flavor of biscuit'y bread and oats.
---11-9-2014---
- With 1lb of rice hulls, the mash went very smoothly. In fact, next time I'm going to bump the 2lbs of oats to 3lbs to try and push that limit a bit.
- 1lb of victory is a shot in the dark. Not sure how this will play with the .5lb of roasted barley. 1lb feels like a lot, so if it's still overpowered by the roasted barley, maybe swap the roasted barley for crafa (something that will add color, but not a whole lot of toasted notes). Also, remember that the dark chocolate might do some lifting on the roasted side.
- If it's too thick and syrup'y, drop the C80 a bit.
- This batch, match temp was perfect. No issues. Sparge was done in ~45min. I did use a starter.
- OG: 1.076 w/ 6 gallon yield. Yikes. Recipe says 1.069 @ 5.5gal.
|
|
Miami Dark
|
Dunkles Weissbier
|
23 Litres |
1.054 |
1.012 |
5.43 |
17.53 |
14.86 °L
|
1.9K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 28 Litres |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.044 |
Efficiency: 68 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 0.35 |
Primary
Temp: 20 ° C |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 6/25/2015 11:13 AM |
Notes: |
|
Mocha Oatmeal Stout
|
Imperial Stout
|
5 Gallons |
1.083 |
1.021 |
8.11 |
60.6 |
41.55 °L
|
1.9K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.33 Gallons |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.057 |
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: 12/2/2021 1:31 PM |
Notes: Actual:
8.5% Abv
63 IBU
90 Minute Boil
1 Full Pint Glass = 2oz Rice Hulls
Water Chem: All In Mash
1.5g Chalk (CaC03)
1.5g Gypsum (CaSO4)
1g Epsom Salt
1/2 Kms Mash
1/2 Kms Sparge
120 Ca2, 4 Mg, 53 SO4, 12 Na, 19 Cl, 250 HCO
Coffee, Bourbon and Vanilla Bean Tincture, and Chocolate Extract added to Keg |
|
Hazy Hoppy 'Rona Relief
|
American IPA
|
5 Gallons |
1.058 |
1.01 |
6.24 |
63.28 |
8.45 °L
|
1.9K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 5.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.053 |
Efficiency: 65 |
Mash Thickness: 1 |
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: 6/24/2020 7:11 PM |
Notes: |
|
Dry Irish Stout
|
Irish Stout
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.047 |
1.011 |
4.68 |
36.75 |
36.3 °L
|
1.9K |
3 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 6.37 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.04 |
Efficiency: 80 |
Mash Thickness: 2 |
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: 2/5/2022 12:33 AM |
Notes: NB recipe uses 1.5 oz of Cluster at 60. |
|
English Invasion 4 Generation IPA
|
American IPA
|
10.5 Gallons |
1.055 |
1.015 |
5.22 |
177.99 |
3.75 °L
|
1.9K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 11 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: N/A |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
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: 6/17/2012 2:41 PM |
Notes: Irish Moss 20 Mins one teaspoon |
|
Vienna Lager
|
Vienna Lager
|
5.54 Gallons |
1.052 |
1.01 |
5.54 |
32.61 |
18.89 °L
|
1.9K |
0 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.038 |
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: 6/13/2019 7:22 PM |
Notes: |
|
PerCloni
|
German Pilsner (Pils)
|
25 Litres |
1.053 |
1.013 |
5.35 |
21.57 |
2.87 °L
|
1.9K |
3 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 30 Litres |
Boil Time: 90 |
Boil Gravity: 1.044 |
Efficiency: 75 |
Mash Thickness: 3 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 1.5 |
Primary
Temp: 10 ° C |
Priming Method: Sugar |
Priming Amount: ? |
Creation
Date: 9/2/2018 10:57 PM |
Notes: |
|
Cascade Trail Pale Ale
|
American Pale Ale
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.058 |
1.011 |
6.16 |
44.18 |
8.15 °L
|
1.9K |
7 |
|
Author:
|
|
OkanaganMike
|
|
Boil
Size: 6.75 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.047 |
Efficiency: 75 |
Mash Thickness: 1.5 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 1.0 |
Primary
Temp: 68 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 11/1/2016 9:35 PM |
Notes: Edited recipe July 18/21 Dry hop from 3oz Cascade to 1.5oz Cascade and 1.5oz Centennial to compliment each other |
|
Shoelaces Saison
|
Saison
|
3 Gallons |
1.082 |
1.023 |
7.7 |
15.91 |
4.78 °L
|
1.9K |
2 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 4 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.061 |
Efficiency: 65 |
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: 6/21/2014 7:47 AM |
Notes: |
|
GlitterBomb Peach Milkshake IPA
|
American IPA
|
5.5 Gallons |
1.069 |
1.021 |
6.38 |
65.96 |
5.98 °L
|
1.9K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 7.5 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.048 |
Efficiency: 70 |
Mash Thickness: 1.4 |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: 1.25 |
Primary
Temp: 67 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 4/16/2018 8:46 PM |
Notes: |
|
Bourbon Dubbel
|
Belgian Dubbel
|
1 Gallons |
1.059 |
1.013 |
6.04 |
10.98 |
14.39 °L
|
1.9K |
1 |
|
|
Boil
Size: 1.3 Gallons |
Boil Time: 60 |
Boil Gravity: 1.046 |
Efficiency: 65 |
Mash Thickness: N/A |
Sugar
Scale: Specific Gravity |
Brew
Method: All Grain |
Pitch Rate: N/A |
Primary
Temp: 65 ° F |
Priming Method: N/A |
Priming Amount: N/A |
Creation
Date: 2/1/2017 5:13 AM |
Notes: Pre-Brew: Oak Chips
THE NIGHT BEFORE: In a container with lid add oak chips and 1/3 cup
bourbon. Cover and shake to incorportate. Keep covered and let sit at room
temperature overnight.
Pre-Brew: Sanitize
You might be surprised to learn that sanitization might actually be the most
important thing here. If things are not completely clean, your yeast will die.
You will not drink good beer, and the next few steps will only provide you with
a valuable learning experience instead of a decidedly more valuable drinking
experience.
• Dissolve half of your sanitzer packet with a gallon of water in a container.
Save the second half for when you bottle.
• Soak everything you are going to use, rinse with water, and let air dry on
some paper towels. If it isn’t totally dry when you are ready to start don’t
worry.
• Keep the extra sanitizer in a container for now. Chances are you’ll want to
re-sanitize something later.
• NOTE: Follow the instructions on your sanitizer. Sanitizers are
different. C-Brite should be rinsed off. StarSan does not need to be.
Brooklyn Brew Shop’s Sanitizer is also no rinse. One packet makes two
gallons. Use half for brewing and half for bottling.
The Mash
• Heat 2.25 quarts (2.1 liters) of water to 160°F (71°C).
• Add grain (This is called “mashing in.” Take note of jargon. Or don’t).
• Mix gently with spoon or spatula until mash has consistency of oatmeal.
Add water if too dry or hot. Temperature will drop to ~150°F (66°C).
• Cook for 60 minutes at 144-152°F (63-68°C). Stir every 10 minutes, and use
your thermometer to take temperature readings from multiple locations.
• You likely don’t need to apply heat constantly. Get it up to temperature,
then turn the heat off. Monitor, stir, and adjust accordingly to keep in range.
• After 60 minutes, heat to 170°F (77°C) while stirring constantly (“Mashing
Out”).
The Sparge
• Heat additional 4 quarts (3.8 liters) of water to 170°F (77°C).
• Set up your “lauter tun” (a strainer over a pot).
• Carefully add the hot grain mash to the strainer, collecting the liquid that
passes through.
• This liquid is called “wort” (pronounced “wert”). It will be your beer.
• Slowly and evenly pour 170°F (77°C) water over the mash to extract the
grain’s sugars.
• You want to collect 5 quarts (4.75 liters) of wort. You will lose about 20%
to evaporation later on, so you want to start with a bit more than you’ll end
with.
• Re-circulate wort through grain once.
The Boil
• In a pot, heat wort until it boils.
• Keep boiling until you’ve hit the “hot break” (Wort will foam - you may
need to reduce heat slightly so it doesn’t boil over.)
• Stir occasionally. All you want is a light boil – too hot and you lose
fermentable sugars and volume.
• The boil will last 60 minutes. Start your timer and add in the rest of the
ingredients at these times:
- Add 1/3 Golding Hops 30 minutes into boil.
- Add 1/3 Golding Hops 55 minutes into boil.
- Add remaining Golding Hops 59 minutes into boil.
- At 60 minutes turn off heat. Dissolve Candi Sugar. Add Bourbon
Soaked Oak Chips.
• Twenty percent of the wort will have evaporated in this step leaving you
with 1 gallon (3.8 liters) of wort. If your boil was a bit high, the surface area
of your pot extra large, or you brewed on a really hot day, you may have
less than the full amount. Don’t worry – you just reduced your beer a bit
too much, but you can add more water in the next step.
Fermentation
• Place brew pot in an ice bath until it cools to 70°F (21°C).
• Once cooled, place strainer over funnel and pour your beer into the
glass fermenter. Yeast needs oxygen. The strainer helps aerate your wort
and clarify your beer (as well as catch any sediment from going into the
fermenter). Add tap water to bring wort up to 1 Gallon mark if level is low.
• “Pitch” yeast. (Toss the whole packet in.)
• Shake aggressively. You’re basically waking up the yeast and getting more
air into the wort.
• Attach sanitized screw-top stopper to bottle. Slide rubber tubing no more
than 1” (2.5 cm) into the stopper and place the other end in small bowl
of sanitizer solution. You’ve just made a “blow-off tube”. It allows CO2 to
escape.
• Let sit for two or three days or until vigorous bubbling subsides. This is
when fermentation is highest. You may notice bubbles and foam at the
top of the beer. After bubbling calms down, clean tubing and ready your
airlock.
• Sanitize, then re-assemble airlock, filling up to line with sanitizer.
• Insert airlock into hole in stopper.
• Keep in a dark place at room temperature for two weeks without disturbing
other than to show off to friends. (If beer is still bubbling, leave sitting until
it stops.)
• In the meantime, drink beer with self-closing swing tops, or ask for empties
at a bar that has some. If you have a bottle capper and caps, you can save
two six packs of non-twistoff beers instead.
. Plan Your Next Brew.
Vist Brooklyn Brew Shop at
the Brooklyn Flea or online at
brooklynbrewshop.com
New brews are added regularly.
For a complete list of retailers that
carry our products check out:
brooklynbrewshop.com/locator
Two Weeks Later: Bottling
• Thoroughly rinse bottles with water, removing any sediment.
• Mix remaining sanitizer with water.
• Fill each bottle with a little sanitizer and shake. Empty after two minutes,
rinse with cold water and dry upside down.
• Dissolve 3 tablespoons maple syrup with 1/2 cup water. Pour into a
sanitized pot. You will be siphoning your beer into the same pot in the next
steps.
- Carbonation comes from adding sugar when bottling, so if you filled
your jug with less than the full gallon in the last step, use less maple
syrup when bottling. Using the full amount can result in your beer
being over-carbonated.
• Siphoning (It all happens pretty fast. You may want to practice on a pot of
water a few times.) To see it in action first, watch the How to Bottle video at
brooklynbrewshop.com/instructions.
A. Attach open tubing clamp to tubing.
B. Fill tubing with sanitizer.
C. Attach sanitized tubing to the short curved end of your sanitized
racking cane. Attach the black tip to the other end - it will help
prevent sediment from getting sucked up. It will probably be a snug
fit, but you can get it on there.
D. Pinch tubing clamp closed.
E. Remove screw-cap stopper and place racking cane into jug, just
above the sediment at the bottom (“trub”).
F. Lower end of tubing not connected to racking cane into sink.
Suction will force beer up and through the racking cane and tubing.
Open tubing clamp, let sanitizer flow into sink until beer just starts
to flow out of the tubing, then clamp shut. Open clamp on tubing,
allowing beer to flow into pot with sugar solution. Tilt jug when beer
level is getting low, but be careful in not sucking up the trub.
• Siphon beer from pot into bottles, pinching tube clamp to stop flow after
each bottle.
• Close bottles.
• Store in a dark place for 2 weeks
Two Weeks Later: Enjoying
• Put beers in the fridge the night before you drink them.
• Drink. Share with friends if you’re the sharing type. |
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