Sunday, January 23, 2011

Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

The forecast is one of extreme cold for the next couple of days. Water pipes are cracked and pictures of outside thermometers are fun to send to family in Florida. Think I'll brew a Munich style dunkel. My sweetie likes them and I have a Hella-Bock yeast that will go into something stronger next. Haven't decided if I'll make a bock or maybe an Oktoberfest..............
Dunkels are not easy to find commercially brewed. Monkshof is delicious and a local brewer, Allan van Anda at Trapp Family Brewery makes a nice one. Had it last night at the Farmhouse. Hope mine is just as good.
Racked the rye this week. Pretty good. And already it looks like it will clear out nicely without the dread rye haze.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

a boring beer?









Well, it's a new year and it's my second brew of the year. I took advantage of no hangover and a quiet (everyone was sick) house to brew on New Year's Day. No surprise, a pilsner. A second pitch of the Wyeast specialty yeast, Rasenmaher. 50F in the basement brewery and it's chugging along nicely.
Today's brew is one I've been grumbling about internally for a while. Our homebrew club has in internal competition in which the winner names the next year's challenge. This year: American rye. Admittedly, I have all I can do to brew enough for us to have homebrew on tap most of the time. Therefore I tend to brew what I/we like. Lots of pilsner, pale ales, Irish red, some dark and or smokey beers. This is not a beer I would brew ordinarily. I like rye. I really enjoy the extra tang it adds to a beer. So when I do use it it's usually in a specialty brew, like a red rye Pilsner or in a smoked porter, or an American amber. American rye, as a style, is pretty boring. Not much color, body or bitterness. Yawn. But, it's a challenge. Okay. Rye beer, in particular, rye beers done with a high percentage of rye in the mash is a challenge. Gummy, gluey, sticky, and the dread stuck mash are all usually a part of any brewers discussion of rye. So I guess the challenge will be, how much rye do I dare?
48% is the number. Using rice hulls and a slight modification to my typical procedure, sparging in progress.
Since I don't normally do a mash out, I mashed on the thick side and layered the mash with hot water as I transferred it into the lauter tun. 1/2 pound of rice hulls as well. Wort is running very well and I have a lovely golden color.
The picture to the right is from Friday. A hawk is dining on a bluejay in the driveway. Gorey but fascinating to watch. I've never been so close to a hawk before. He/she was very intent on the meal. But it glared at me as the camera beeped as it powered up. I was inside. That's some fine hearing.