April 2005 - Primetime Brewers
Transcription
April 2005 - Primetime Brewers
RUBBER CHICKEN The WWW.PRIMETIMEBREWERS.COM APRIL 21, 2005 6:30PM NEXT MEETING: HIDEOUT BREWERY From the Prez… Please take note of our new meeting location for this month, we will meet at the Hideout Brewery. This was, of course, the old Hair of the Frog located in Hubba Tubba’s building. Ken hopes to officially open on the 20th, but even if he’s not, he would like us to meet there, he’ll have a few beers for us to try also. This month’s style for the AHA COC is extract beers, your beer must contain at least 50% extract. The entry deadline is tight, if your beer wins it must be in Florida by Tuesday the 26th, so it will have to be sent out by the next day, and shipped via 2-day air. The club will pay for the postage as always. We’ll have all the necessary paper work and addresses at the meeting. Good luck. Don’t forget May 7th is Big Brew Day. There are 2 recipes for this year. First is an IPA recipe brewed with rye from Denny Conn of Noti, OR—a frequent poster on the AHA’s TechTalk email forum. Since it’s creation as a homebrew, this beer has been brewed by Rogue Ales of Oregon and by Olfabrikken, a Danish brewery. See the March/April 2005 issue of Zymurgy for the complete story. The second recipe, Positively Porter, took best-ofshow at last year’s AHA National Homebrew Competition, winning brewer “Rocket” Rod Romanak of Kailua Kona, HI the AHA Homebrewer of the Year Award. Kona Brewing Company of Hawaii thought the recipe was good enough to brew up a 20 Barrel batch of it. Let us know at this meeting if you might be hosting a site. Checkout beertown.org for the complete recipes, and to register your site. See you all Thursday. MAY 7TH— BIG BREW DAY RECIPES DC's Rye IPA - All Grain Recipe O.G.: 1.073 F.G.: 1.013 IBU: 68 9.5 lbs. Pale Malt(2-row) 2.5 lbs. Rye Malt 1.0 lbs. Crystal 60L 0.5 lbs. Cara-Pils Dextrine Malt 0.5 lbs. Wheat Malt 1.0 oz. Mt. Hood, 4.9% Alpha Acid, First Wort Hop 1.0 oz. Columbus, 17.8% Alpha Acid, 60 min. 0.5 oz. Mt. Hood, 4.9% Alpha Acid, 30 min. 1.5 oz. Mt. Hood, 4.9% Alpha Acid, 0 min. 1.0 oz.oz. Columbus, 17.8% Alpha Acid, Dry Hop BrewTek CL-50 California Pub Brewery Ale Yeast or Wyeast 1272 American Ale Yeast II 1 tsp. Gypsum 1 tsp. Irish Moss Mash grains at 153o F for 60 minutes. Mash out at 170o F and sparge with 170o F water. Collect enough run off to end up with 5 gallons after a 70-minute boil. Add first wort hops and gypsum and bring to a boil. Boil for 10 minutes then add second hop addition. Boil 30 minutes more and add next hop addition. Boil 20 minutes more then add Irish moss. After a 70-minute boil, turn of burner and add 1.5 oz. of Mt. Hood hops. Chill to below 65o F, transfer to fermenter, pitch yeast and aerate well. Ferment at 62-65o F until fermentation is complete. Rack to secondary fermenter with dry hops and age for a week. Bottle with 0.75 cups of corn sugar. DC's Rye IPA – Mini-Mash/Extract Recipe 4.25 lbs. Light Dry Malt Extract 2.5 lbs. Pale Malt (2-row) 2.5 lbs. Rye Malt 1.0 lbs. Crystal 60L 0.5 lbs. Cara-Pils Dextrine Malt 0.5 lbs. Wheat Malt mini-mash. Heat 8.5 quarts of water to 167o F, then add crushed grains. Stir well to distribute heat. Temperature should stabilize at about 153 o F. Wrap a towel around the pot and set aside for an hour. Heat mini-mash to 170o F then pour into a strainer. Rinse with 170o F water, collecting approximately 3 gallons of wort. Stir in extract and add first wort hops and gypsum and bring to a boil. Boil for 10 minutes then add second hop addition. Boil 30 minutes more and add next hop addition. Boil 20 minutes more then add Irish moss. After a 70-minute boil, turn of burner and add 1.5 oz. of Mt. Hood hops. Transfer to fermenter filled with 2.5 gallons of cold water (top-up to 5 gallons if necessary). When temperature drops below 65o F, pitch yeast and aerate well. Ferment at 62-65o F until fermentation is complete. Rack to secondary fermenter with dry hops and age for a week. Bottle with 0.75 cups of corn sugar. Positively Porter – All Grain Recipe O.G.: 1.068 F.G.: 1.020 IBU: 47 1.0 oz. Mt. Hood, 4.9% Alpha Acid, First Wort Hop 1.33 oz. Columbus, 17.8% Alpha Acid, 60 min. 0.5 oz. Mt. Hood, 4.9% Alpha Acid, 30 min. 1.5 oz. Mt. Hood, 4.9% Alpha Acid, 0 min. 1.0 oz. Columbus, 17.8% Alpha Acid, Dry Hop 9.25 lbs. Pale Malt (2-row) 1.75 lbs. Special B Malt 1.25 lbs. Roasted Barley, 300 L* 0.5 lbs. Chocolate Malt 0.33 lbs. Black Patent Malt BrewTek CL-50 California Pub Brewery Ale Yeast or Wyeast 1272 American Ale Yeast II 0.75 oz. Nugget, 13.0% Alpha Acid, 60 min. 1.0 oz. Chinook, 13.0% Alpha Acid, 30 min. 1.0 oz. Chinook, 13.0% Alpha Acid, 0 min. 1 tsp. Gypsum 1 tsp. Irish Moss The rye and wheat malt in this recipe must be mashed, so this extract recipe incorporates a * Note: If you can’t find 300L Roasted Barley substitute with chocolate malt. Wyeast 1056 American Ale Yeast or White Labs WLP001 California Ale Yeast Mash in at 104o F and hold for 10 minutes. Raise temperature to 122o F and hold for 30 minutes. Raise temperature to 140o F and hold for 10 minutes. Raise temperature to 158o F and hold for 60 minutes. (If you prefer to use a single infusion mash, mash at 153o F for 60 minutes.) Mash out at 170o F and sparge with 170o F water. Collect enough run off to end up with 5 gallons after a 90-minute boil (approx. 6.5 gallons). Bring to a boil. Boil for 30 minutes then add Nugget hops. Boil 30 minutes more and add second hop addition. After a 90minute boil, turn off burner and add last hop addition. Chill to 66o F, transfer to fermenter, pitch yeast and aerate well. Ferment at 66o F for one week. Rack to secondary and store at 66o F for three weeks. Bottle with 0.75 cups of corn sugar. sary). When wort temperature is down to 66o F, pitch yeast and aerate well. Ferment at 66o F for one week. Rack to secondary and store at 66o F for three weeks. Bottle with 0.75 cups of corn sugar. NOTE: All Grain recipes assume 75% efficiency, adjust grain bill to match your system. You know you’re a home brewer….. If you have more refrigerators for beer than you do for food. If going to a brew fest is part of your honeymoon. If you plan your family vacations by which breweries you can visit. If you and the local bottle-grannies have come to an accord over collection zoning. Positively Porter – Extract Recipe If you have more airlocks than the interna5.5 lbs. Light Malt Extract tional space station. 1.75 lbs. Special B Malt If you've tasted the finest commercial beer and 1.25 lbs. Roasted Barley, 300 L* said, "I can do better." 0.5 lbs. Chocolate Malt If you have more kegs than your average fra0.33 lbs. Black Patent Malt ternity. If staring at a bubbling airlock is more exciting * Note: If you can’t find 300L Roasted Barley than the super bowl. substitute with chocolate malt. If you pour your coffee carefully to avoid hot side aeration. 1.25 oz. Nugget, 13.0% Alpha Acid, 60 min. If you bring a 3-gallon corny to a cook-out 1.0 oz. Chinook, 13.0% Alpha Acid, 30 min. with its own neoprene jacket. 1.0 oz. Chinook, 13.0% Alpha Acid, 0 min. If you've kept a log of the temperature in your Wyeast 1056 American Ale Yeast or White basement for the past 5 years. Labs WLP001 California Ale Yeast If the presence of a basement was a major factor in the selection of your new home. Steep grains at 150o F in 2 gallons of water for If you have room in your fridge for 7 different 20 minutes. Remove grains and sparge with 1 types of beer, 6 packages of hops, 4 vials of gallon of 170o F water. Stir in extract then yeast, and two cans of rice syrup, but no room bring to a boil. Boil for 30 minutes then add for milk for the kids. Nugget hops. Boil 30 minutes more and add If you schedule your lunch break around trips second hop addition. After a 90-minute boil, to the homebrew store. turn of burner and add last hop addiIf you start asking questions about other peotion. Transfer to fermenter filled with 3 galple's worts. lons of cold water (top-up to 5 gallons if neces- If your 5 acre yard is completely mulched with spent grains. If you have multiple propane tanks but only use charcoal grills. If you own more stainless steel than your local hospital. If you get up in the middle of the night to dry hop. If you plan your days off around when the homebrew supply store is open. If you have 45 gallons of bottled beer in the basement and wonder if you should double the batch you are brewing on Saturday. If your basement looks like the set of a 1930's horror movie. If your 5 gallon propane bottle has never been connected to a barbecue. If you don't brew much until your wife leaves town for the weekend, then you brew 30 gallons. If you have more than two refrigerators. If you have bottles of bleach and no white clothes. If you hear someone say "sock hop" and you think they're dyslexic. If your neighbors think you started a bottle recycling center. If you use old, leftover hops as potpourri. If you've got more cooking utensils and gadgets than your spouse does. If you return from New Year's Eve parties with a trunk full of empty champagne bottles. If you always make sure to take the truck, rather than the car, to the brew supply store. If you name your new puppy "Fuggles" or "Growler". If you send a holiday card to the owner of your brew supply store. If your house smells like a brewery. If you buy more pantyhose than your wife (...for hops!) If you kidnap the family thermometer to test the temperature of the wort. If you hear the term 'malted milk' you think they are talking about a stout. If you've ever bought a case of beer saying, "I paid for the bottles, the beer comes with them for free." If you've ever had 6 or more cases of EMPTY beer bottles in your house before you had a party, not after. If you've raided the boy scout bottle collection/ recycling for old bottles. If you've ever left your local soda bottling company with your trunk and back seat full of 5 gallon cornelius kegs. If you give clothes to Goodwill just to get more room in your closet for beer and equipment. If someone says they've had a yeast infection and you ask what they were brewing at the time. If you get crown seals and hop bags for christmas presents. If you've ever bought returnable beer bottles with no intention of EVER returning them. If you're surfing the net at 3:40 am looking for homebrew websites or recipies. If you cancel a date because your wort hasn't reached pitching temperature yet. If you can't remember that last time you popped open a flip-top beer can. If you think the term pitch has nothing to do with baseball. If your cupboards have more brewing items and bottles than they do food and plates. If you don't think that 10 gallons of beer is a lot. If you've ever cut a hole in a refridgerator. If walking across the kitchen floor sounds like velcro. If you've ever asked the question, "by weight or volume?" If you've ever used a mop on a ceiling. If you own a sterile trash can. If you've ever tried to improve a Budweiser by stirring in a hop pellet. PRIMETIME BREWERS COMPETITION PAGE Club Only Competition Calendar 2005 January : Irish Red Ale (9D) February : Strong Scotch Ale (9E) March : Sour Beers (17) April : Extract* (1-23) AHA COC May : Belgian and French Ale (16) COC June : Michigan Basement (Best of Cellar) September: European Amber Lager (3) COC October: Baltic Porter (12C) COC November: Fruit Beer (20) *Must be at least 50% extract 2005 Brewer of the Year Standings Dan Humphrey John Applegarth Jeff Carlson Eric Fouch Dave Kilgore 20 20 16 12 4 Individual Competitions can be found at: www.beertown.org March Sour Beer (17) Club Competition 1st 2nd 3rd John Applegarth—Berliner Weiss Jeff Carlson—Berliner Weiss Dan Humphrey—Flanders Brown Drunk Monk Challenge Competition Jeff Carlson 2nd English Mild 3rd American Amber PAY YOUR DUES, GET THIS CARD! Club Officers President: Jeff Carlson ([email protected]) Vice Pres.: Charlie Cope ([email protected]) Treas.: John Applegarth ([email protected]) Secy & RC Editor: Jim Verlinde ([email protected]) Webmaster: Dan Humphrey ([email protected] m) Yeastmaster: Eric Fouch Foodmeister: Art McLaughlin WEBBERVILLE 800-765-9435 www.thingsbeer.com PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS. THEY SUPPORT US!