Monday, October 17, 2011

Brew Day Wrap-Up & 5 Month Update?


Great googly moogly! May 22nd? I just can't seem to maintain any kind of momentum here.

Today was a gloriously beautiful day in the PNW! It was a perfect brew day - we could not have planned it better. Robert arrived just after 10 AM (after doubling back to get his forgotten hops), and we started the day with some cleaning... Wouldn't it be nice if everything was clean when you got started? Yeah, right!

We got going on the brewing fairly quickly though. Robert always gets an early lead and finishes first, because he's still doing extract/steeping partial-boil batches! Today was no different - he already hit flame-out before I even finished my single infusion mash. Plus, I am always multi-tasking here at the house: doing something for my kids, or my wife, or cooking lunch...

He brewed up a batch of American Stout... Once his primary is done, he's going to rack it onto about 5 lbs of blackberries. I've never had a Blackberry Stout, but the LHBS owner says it's a great recipe. In a similar vein, I brewed up a batch-and-a-half of Dry Stout; I'll end up with 5 gallons of Dry Stout and about 3 gallons of Cranberry Stout. There was no collaboration in advance, and yet we still somehow ended up at fruit beers - both Stouts, no less!

I had a substantial amount of 2nd generation Wyeast 1028 (London Ale), so I split it up for our batches and got it reactivated with a bit of starter wort before the brew session. It is always confidence-inspiring to have a good-sized pitch of active, healthy yeast that get things off and running right off the bat! This yeast really gets mixed reviews on various forums, but I've always had good luck with it. But I always use Jamil's yeast pitching rate calculator and either pitch multiple packs/vials or do a starter.

The last 5 brewing months in review:

June: Hops were growing like crazy - I had to weld up some additional supports to keep them from pulling my cross-wire down. No brewing. Bummer.

July: Hops threatening to take over the garden - wife threatening to hack away at the hops (Something about having them winding their way into the corn?). Brewed up two batches of beer right at the end of the month for a leadership retreat: an Amber and an American Pale. Both were well-received, but folks were drinking very conservatively (it was late in the day and a short BBQ - everybody was playing it safe!), so despite having about 20 folks, we only put a small dent in the beer (more for later anyway!).

August: 2 kegs of beer delivered to leadership retreat... Brewed a quick batch of extract English Pale. Began monitoring my hops very closely in anticipation of the upcoming harvest!

September: No brewing, some cleaning around the "brewery". Began harvesting the first of my hops. The first few varieties ready were the weaker producers - a bit of a disappointing yield on my Cascades and Horizons (right around an ounce each of dried hops); looking at the others, I had to take comfort in the fact that they were faring better. The Chinooks did a little better, and I ended up with several ounces of dried hops.

October: Finished up the hop harvest/drying... Ended up with about 1/2 pound of Fuggles. I gave up trying to separate the Glaciers and Nuggets which had decided on near-symbiosis, and I just harvested them all together; this was the big haul - over a pound of dried hops in this batch! In fact, I had so many, I had to switch from a window screen to a sliding door screen to get these dried! And I brewed today!