Thursday, December 22, 2011

Van Diemans Brewing - White Hills White Ale

This a bottle conditioned White Ale, produced by a Tasmanian brewery located in Evandale. Like all white ales, this is low-hopped and hazy, highlighting the flavours produced from the Belgian yeast and wheat malt. The bubbles are large and coarse which overpowers the subtle citrus flavours and I imagine it would benefit from a few months more in the bottle. Well balanced, there are no real stand-out flavours or aromas which makes this a nice, but nothing special beer. The coarse carbonation means I wouldn't choose this as a 'more than one' drinking beer.

3/5 Coasters

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Hobgoblin Extra Strong Ale

Hobgoblin and the other brews produced by Wychwood Brewery are among my favourite British beers, and so I was very excited to get my hands on a recipe for the beer characterised by the axe wielding goblin.

The Hobgoblin


This is my third all-grain brew and was a full day effort thanks to the many hiccups I had with my new three ring burner on the balcony (incorrectly sized connections). 


The guardian of the mash tun
The grain bed
My new burner
This beer takes a variety of specialty malts for the colour and Styrian Goldings for the flavour and aroma.
This batch uses reclaimed Irish ale yeast from my Amber Ale brew. I'm looking forward to tasting the result!

Gravity: 1.050 (Target 1.059). FG 1.010 (target 1.016) ABV 5.7% (target 5.5%)
Yield: 19 litres (target 18.9 litres)
Brew method: All-grain with US batch sparging.
Notes:My final gravity was off quite a bit, but I'm hoping that I can reclaim the ABV during fermentation (my last all-grain batch ended up .010 lower than the predicated gravity). I'm unsure as the cause to this. On the recommendation of a couple of fellow beer lovers, brewers and chemists, I compensated for liquid lost during the boil by adding water near the end. It could be either this or inefficiency in my sparging. 

McNeill's Firehouse Amber Ale


This is another beer that uses East Kent Goldings for it's bittering, flavouring and aroma hops. This simple Amber Ale, coloured with US Crystal Malt, gets dry-hopped with Cascade to give it a bit more character.


Gravity: 1.054 (Target 1.055 - 1.056). FG 1.017 (target 1.016-1.017)  ABV 5.3%
Yield: 19 litres (target 18.9 litres)
Brew method: Extract with US batch sparging for the specialty grains
Notes: Straight forward brew. I transferred it to the secondary fermenter for dry hopping after about 5 days to ensure there was still some yeast activity to ensure a layering of CO2 (which will prevent oxidisation). I also boiled up a small amount of DME and finings to kick start extra fermentation and to hopefully clear the beer a bit more before bottling. This was all added during the dry hopping phase.


I also reclaimed the Irish Ale yeast from the brew for my next three beers: HobGoblin Extra Strong Ale, Tom Mik's Imperial Stout and, Shipyard LongFellow Ale.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Mountain Goat India Pale Ale review



Beautifully coloured and delightfully hopped, this IPA combines the pineapple and passion fruit flavours of galaxy hops with the bitter pine tones of cascade. A lovely aroma over a well balanced body makes this a very nice example of the style. Wheat and English Crystal malt provide the dark amber colour and the pleasant, full body. A short bitter finish rounds off this great beer. An excellent drink for enjoying with friends over a good lamb curry.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Indian Summer Pale Ale - Tasting notes






Method: All-grain
Specialty grains: US crystal malt.
Hops: Northern Brewer (bittering), Cascade and Williamette (flavour and aroma).
Yeast: London Ale (liquid)

Comments: This beer fermented much further than the recipe suggested it would which is why I ended up with a much higher ABV. I have yet to work out why this happened.

ABV: 6.2% (the recipe suggests 5.0%).
Yield: 16.5 litres

Tasting notes: This was ready to drink after 4 weeks and is a very refreshing brew.
It pours with a white frothy head made from large bubbles over a cloudy pale amber beer. The hops are very noticeable in this brew with hints of stone fruit and a melon finish. Well carbonated after five weeks with a medium body.
This is a beer designed to be drunk in a pub accompanied with pub food - imagine a plate of thick cut chips with aoli and serving of lemon pepper calamari.

What I learnt: This was my first all-grain brew that was done properly. It makes a complex and satisfying beer. The only downside of all grain to extract brewing would be all the additional equipment required and additional hours you need for sparging and cooling. It really does make you feel a little wasteful using a wort chiller to get the temperature down however, I can see no other way, something that hasn't been an issue with my extract brews (where I use bricks of ice to bring down the temperature). 

Would I make this again? Maybe, but probably not. It's a complex beer and you could only manage one or two at a stretch before it began to labour on you. There are plenty of other Pale Ales out there to try before I come back to this recipe.

Friday, November 11, 2011

SW1 - English Bitter

The last English Bitter I made was from a can kit, and it tasted terrible. It is with this trepidation that I come to making my first extract bitter modeled on SW1.
SW1 is not a particularly complex beer - it has British Crystal malt as it's specialty grains and used East Kent Goldings as it's bittering, flavouring and aroma hops.

Gravity: 1.038 (Target 1.039 - 1.041). FG 1.012 (Target 1.009-1.010)
Yield: 19 litres (target 18.9 litres)
Brew method: Extract with US batch sparging for the specialty grains
Notes: Straight forward brew. I Might have put the aroma hops in for a minute longer than I should have but I'm hoping this won't affect the smell.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Lucknow IPA - Brewing notes


For me, the word Lucknow evokes the drama and bloodshed of the Siege of Lucknow during the Indian Mutiny of 1857. The Occupy! movement around the world has nothing on the Indian Rebellion where the native population of a country took it upon themselves to try and shrug off what amounted to government sponsored corporate control of an entire country and it's occupants. Imagine having your entire country run by a company whose only purpose was tow ring as much wealth out of you and your natural resources to send overseas? To say things were in a bad way is an understatement. This was colonialism at its most unsavory, and it took the brilliance of Gandhi before independence was finally achieved, ninety years later.
Reading the histories of the many wars across Queen Victoria's empire, and the comical recounting by the fictional Harry Flashman, it was the battles of the Indian Rebellion that stood out the most to me, much as did this beer when I was flicking through my book of recipes.

It's an American Indian Pale Ale heavily hopped with Cascade, one of the most popular American varietals. One of the more important reasons for choosing this ale was it gave me an opportunity to use the London Ale yeast I had reclaimed from my Indian Summer Pale Ale (is there a theme here?).


Chinook and Cascade bittering hops

After the sparge (using my homemade mini-mash tun)

The boil

Gravity: 1.062 (Target 1.059)
Yield: 20 litres (target 18.9 litres)
Brew method: Extract with US batch sparging for the specialty grains
Notes: This went surprisingly smoothly and my method of using large ice blocks when topping up the water in the fermenter means I can get down to temperature in about 30 minutes. The yeast starter (using the reclaimed London Ale yeast) hadn't really kicked off when I pitched it so I'm just going to hope that it was reactivated and all will be well. 


*Edit* Twelve hours later and I have a very healthy krausen forming on top of my wort. Looks like the yeast survived!

My only frustrations today was finding out that the Brew shop had left off 3 kg of light malt extract from my order so I was unable to put the Ginger ale on as planned.


*Edit* 6 Days later, fermenting activity has subsided so I'm now moving onto the dry hopping stage. This will add extra hop flavour and whole lot of hop aroma. 
To dry hop, you add the hop pellets to a secondary fermenter and then drain the primary fermenter right into the second. There is no need to worry about contamination at this stage as most of the fermentables (read "food for infections to grow on") have already been converted to alcohol, and the hops have antibacterial properties (hops were originally used in beers as a preservative which is why IPAs are heavily hopped - they required a highly level of hop oil to preserve the liquid for the long voyage on ships from England to the Indian subcontinent where they served to slake the thirst of the colonials).


The beer will stay in the secondary fermenter for 2-3 weeks till it clears further (meaning the sediment will settle out of suspension) and it will then be bottled in the regular way.


transferring the beer to the secondary fermenter