Sunday, December 20, 2015

Brew Day: Simple Hoppy Dubbel

Going by the definition and most recipes, a Dubbel sounds like a boring beer. The all grain version has a malt character contributed by some base malt. Then there’s a good amount of sugar to up the gravity and keep it there. The hop additions should contribute around 25 to 40 IBUs and the Belgian yeast should produce mild fruity notes that complement the high ABV and bitterness.

Going by the review of Dubbel, it sounds to be anything but a boring beer. This is one beer that is bound to get drinkers hammered quickly but its also a beer that can keep the drinker warm if consumed over a long conversation. I had some time over the weekend and it felt good to get back to brewing after a while and decided to brew a Dubbel. The recipe I share below has had its fair share of additions, subtractions, changes, doubts and research. The day before I brewed, I went back to the original recipe and tweaked it a bit.

The grain bill is simple: Pilsner, Munich and sugar. Having already brewed a few recipes with different sugars, I had a fair number of options for the sugar addition: jaggery, cane sugar and Belgian candi. I decided to go with cane sugar as it was probably the easiest of all sugar additions; I would have to go out and buy jaggery and making 500 grams of Belgian candi is no easy task.

Bitterness was kept at 25 IBUs with 5 grams of Horizon, but I was constantly thinking of improving things. It was then that I decided to make this a more interesting Dubbel by adding some finishing hops. I measured out 4 grams each of Triple Perle, Cascade, Lemon Drop and Goldings and added it in the last 15 minutes of the boil and I’m glad I did this.

I do not have Belgian yeast and that is why this beer is not a true Belgian Dubbel. I made a yeast starter a week ago with S-04 and pitched it. Two days after pitching the yeast, I can still hear the fermentation going strong and the aroma is heavenly. And that’s when I thought of a small dry hop regimen. I will decide whether I need to dry hop or not after fermentation and doing an aroma check then.

One thing I decided to do with this beer is to give it some time to mature and mellow. I’m not thinking of ageing this beer like the Eis Stout, but a one month time frame before I open a bottle should have its advantages.

Simple Hoppy Dubbel

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 8 litres
Type: All Grain
IBU: 25
SRM: 9
OG: 1.078

Grains and Sugars
1.5 kg Pilsner
500 grams Munich 20
500 grams sugar

Hops
5 grams Horizon @ 60
4 grams Triple Perle  @ 15
4 grams Cascade @ 15
4 grams Lemon Drop @ 15
4 grams Goldings @ 15

Yeast
Fermentis S-04 Ale Yeast. I made a yeast starter a week ago and pitched it.

Schedules
Mash at 65°C for 60 minutes.
Batch sparged at 80°C.
Boiled for 60 minutes.

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Tasting Day: Pomegranate Cream Ale

Recipe and Brewday here.

After about 3 weeks in the bottle, I popped open a bottle of the Pomegranate Cream Ale.

The last time I had a pink or pinkish colored beer was at Punjabi By Nature and I ordered it based on its description. The nose smelt of vomit, which contributed to a poor drinking experience. This pink beer however has a lot going for it.


The Cream Ale has proved itself to be a very good base beer. My other choice at the time of recipe formulation was a wheat beer but I’m glad I went with the Cream Ale. The low SRM of the Cream Ale and the dark pomegranate juice is the reason why this beer appears pink. Against the background, the body of the beer may not seem pink, but it is.

On the pour, a bright white head forms slowly and it sticks around for some time. The body is light and as you can see, pink. In fact, it is lighter in body than the Cream Ale. The use of a secondary fermenter has also provided a remarkably clear beer when compared to the Cream Ale, which remained hazy throughout.

The first sip was revealing: truly tart beer, and an inviting tartness at that. The pomegranate tartness is pronounced, but it isn’t overwhelming. I was hoping for a bit of sweetness too, but I guess all of the natural fruit sugars may have fermented out completely. 

I smelt a sour note on the nose, but this isn’t really a sour beer. I think the tartness provides a slightly different sour note and not a real sour note like a Berliner Weisse.

The light body, easy drinking and that slight tartness makes this a good summer beer.

I would rate this beer as a marginally good beer. It isn’t a particularly good one where I would speak volumes of it but as I said earlier, a marginally good beer. However, it is miles ahead of the Watermelon Wheat Ale I brewed earlier with no dank, vegetal notes and unpretentious drinkability.

The thing I’m glad about is that fact that the Cream Ale has proved itself to be a worthy base beer and I’ll continue to use it for other fruit beers or beers where I have additions in the secondary. Like a Mango Ale during the mango season.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Tasting Day: Simcoe SMaSH IPA

Recipe and Brewday here.

It has been a busy, busy November for me and in anticipation of this busy period, I brewed a few beers so I could come home and have some of them. I think that idea worked because work keeps me busy, but I don’t have to worry about running out of beer any time soon.

Last week, after close to 4 weeks of carbonation, I opened a bottle of the Simcoe SMaSH IPA. In as few words as possible, this beer is a mix of good and bad beer characteristics.


As I opened the bottle, a fair bit of hiss and smoke came out indicating a good carbonation. I did not have to pour aggressively and a two finger thick head quickly formed and remained for some time after which it ended up at the side of the glass. The color, being an extract beer, was expected to be around 25 SRM and it is spot on with its orangish-brownish, murky opaque look.

On the nose, there is a heavenly aroma of pines and earthy notes that make me want to smell this beer more than drink it. Needless to say, it was very, very good on the nose. In fact, I will say that the nose was the best part of this beer.

If there’s one aspect of this beer that trounces all others, it’s the bitterness. At a palate-shattering 62 IBUs, this beer coated my entire mouth for a while and made it seem like I was chewing through hops. The other problem with such high IBUs for me was that it took a while for me to truly taste food during the drinking session. The bitterness played around with my taste buds and I sipped water between sips of beer, and even rinsed my mouth quite a few times.

In a way, this beer is quite good, but the bitterness doesn’t allow any of those good characteristics to shine. It’s a beer I’ll make again, but I will certainly be more careful with the calculations.

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Brew Day: Orange Peel Pale Ale

This was a beer I planned to brew during a long time back, but the brew day unfortunately got pushed due to work.

Even though many, many wise people have stated that packaged fruit juice in India is just coloured, artificially flavoured plain water, there are times when I reach for a Tropicana or a Real fruit juice. I usually keep away from packaged juices and prefer the freshly squeezed one but depending on the time of the day and workload, sometimes that orange flavoured drink has an impact. Maybe it works differently for different people but this is how it works for me.

Some brewers prefer adding fruit juices or extracts to their beer. I prefer adding the actual fruit or sometimes, fresh fruit puree. In this case, it was going to be orange peel. I had quite a large amount of oranges sitting at home and I decided on a simple extract brew. Unlike an earlier beer where I added orange peels to the secondary and had to deal with a strong, overwhelming orange flavour in the beer, this time I decided to add a large amount of orange peel for a long boil, say around 30 minutes, rather than a standard 15 or 5 minute boil.

The only problem with this approach is that I feared the orange aroma would be lost during fermentation. It would decrease from the initial few days of fermentation and may vanish completely by the end of fermentation. I could be completely wrong here but there was only one way to get orange flavour in the beer and keep it there during fermentation: add a truckload of orange peels during the boil. Yes, a truckload, like around 200 grams of orange peel for an 8 litre batch.

I took a whiff of the fermenter last week and there was a strong aroma of malt and a very pronounced orange note to it. I took another whiff of the fermenter yesterday and the orange aroma is not quite as much as I expected. I was right in guessing that fermentation would drive away the orange aroma. I will have to taste this beer before confirming if I need to add even more orange peel to the boil.

Orange Peel Pale Ale

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 8 litres
Type: Extract
IBU: 20
SRM: 16
OG: 1.046

Grains and Sugars
1 kg Dry Malt Extract
 - 500 grams added at the start of boil
 - 500 grams at flame out

Hops
4 grams Horizon @ 45 min

Other Additions
Add 200 grams of orange peel at 30 minutes to the boil.

Yeast
Fermentis S-04 Ale Yeast

Schedules
Boiled for 45 minutes.

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Brew Day: Pomegranate Cream Ale

I made a Watermelon Wheat Ale and that’s about the only fruit beer I’ve made.

So when I sat down with my last kilo of Pilsner malt before restocking, I had various ideas for a simple yet flavorful beer. I was thinking along the lines of a previously brewed Cream Ale and add a bit of fruit puree or fruit juice in the secondary. For a fruit beer a lightly hopped wheat beer seems to be the best base beer, but my plan was to re-brew a slightly different version of my Cream Ale and I will let you know if this forms a good base. My understanding is that it will, but I will wait till I taste the beer and confirm my findings.

The decision about which fruit to use for this beer was simple: the in-season pomegranate. It’s a bit tart and sometimes if they’re not ripe, they can be sour too and choosing the right pomegranates can make all the difference.

There was a bit of an apprehension about how long I should keep the beer in secondary. I had a bit of an issue with the Water Wheat Ale in that the watermelon puree was in the secondary for about 3 days but ended up with a very pronounced vegetal flavor. But if I went with one day in secondary, I fear I may have a high amount of unfermented fruit sugars that can over-carbonate the beers and even give me a few bottle bombs. This brewwiki link said pomegranates are very subtle tasting, and its best to use pomegranate juice sold in stores. That wasn’t much nor was there enough to answer the million questions I had and there wasn’t enough information anywhere else that I could rely on. So I decided to go it alone: add about a litre of fresh pomegranate juice for 2 days and see how things turned out.

Based on this experiment from the folks at brulosophy.com, I targeted a mash temperature of 63°C to extract as much fermentables as possible. I got my hands on a new hop, Horizon, with about 12.3% AA and clean bittering properties and that was chosen for the single hop addition. Before adding the hops to the boil, I smelled it and it had spicy, pungent notes to and I think it will be interesting to see how this hop works with something as simple as a Cream Ale.

From the recipe, it’s a low gravity, really pale yellow beer. But the pomegranate juice with its sugars will raise the alcohol levels slightly and turn the beer to a slightly orange shade from the pale yellow.

Pomegranate Cream Ale (Tasting notes here)

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 8 litres
Type: All Grain, Fruit Beer
IBU: 25
SRM: 2.4, although this will change to a slight orange with the addition of pomegranate juice
OG: 1.036

Grains and Sugars
1.2 kg Pilsner
300 grams Flaked Rice

Hops
6 grams Horizon @ 45


Other Additions
Add 1 litre of fresh pomegranate juice to the beer in secondary for 2 days after a week of fermentation.

Yeast
Fermentis S-04 Ale Yeast

Schedules
Mash at 63°C for 60 minutes.
Batch sparged at 80°C.
Boiled for 45 minutes.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Brew Day: Simcoe SMaSH IPA

Honestly, its good to get back to brewing. No, it really feels good to sit down and review a recipe, go through my hops and malts and to check on my yeast starter from time to time. But I wish I did a better job of reviewing my recipes.

This beer was intended to be a riff of my Citra SMaSH Dark Ale with a few minute differences.

Truth be told, this beer was the result of a simple screw up. The original intent was to make a clone of the Citra SMaSH Dark Ale as is. No changes, none whatsoever. But the hop additions went wrong. I loaded the calculator at brewersfriend.com, entered the details and when it came to the hop additions, I added 15 grams of Simcoe (12.7% AA) to be boiled for 30 minutes to get about 24 IBUs which sounded fair enough, although it was slightly higher than the IBUs of the Citra SMaSH. So I was finally set.

It was only after I added the hops to the wort that I sat down to review my recipe and saw that when I converted from US to Metric units on the calculator, I forgot to change the batch size. The default batch size in the calculator is 5 gallons US, which when converted to Metric is 20.8 liters. And 15 grams of Simcoe will add 24 IBUs for 20.8 liters of beer over a 30 minute boil. Only, I wasn’t making 20.8 liters, it’s a much smaller 8 liter batch. I realized my mistake and changed the batch size to 8 liters to see that the calculated IBUs now stood at 62.

And that’s that. Every brewer has a story to tell about their beers and this is mine. So now I’ve got a beer that has IPA level bitterness but is also a SMaSH because there’s just one malt and just one hop and Simcoe will be used again to dry hop. So this is a Simcoe SMaSH IPA. I hope it can be called that but I'm afraid it would never completely fit the description of either an IPA or a SMaSH.

Simcoe SMaSH IPA (Tasting notes here)

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 8 litres
Type: Extract
IBU: 62
SRM: 25
OG: 1.060

Grains and Sugars
1.3 kg Dry Malt Extract
 - 600 grams added at the start of boil
 - 700 grams at flame out

Hops
15 grams Simcoe @ 30 min
10 grams Simcoe dry hopped for 5 days

Yeast
Fermentis S-04 Ale Yeast

Schedules
Boiled for 30 minutes.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Losing Beer and Getting Back

Its been quite a while since I posted anything here. This is a small post about what’s been happening so far.

I brewed two small batches of beer on a Friday and then I had to be hospitalized for 4 days about a week after I brewed. I couldn't get back to the beers quickly enough and when I finally did, I looked at spoilt beer in the fermenters, both of which I had to throw away with a heavy heart.

I’m in the pink of health now and I’m currently writing a few recipes to get back to brewing. These beers are simple, calculatedly flavoursome and easy drinking beers. Winter is approaching and usually this calls for some high gravity, body warming beers, but I’d like to get back to brewing with a few simple beers and then move onto the more complex ones.

I will start posting recipes shortly, so thank you for sticking around.

Monday, September 21, 2015

Tasting Day: Amber Wheat IPA

Recipe and Brewday here.

After about 3 weeks of carbonation, I opened a bottle of the Amber Wheat IPA just before a London derby in the EPL. The London derby was fiery but I will stick to reviewing the beer in this post.


This IPA pours a proper thick head, much like a head every brewer dreams of for all his beers. The head sticks around all the way to the end of the glass and then some. The pour is a beautiful dark amber and it is slightly darker than what I expected. It seemed to me like I took a bottle from one of my extract batches.

This is a medium bodied beer with pines and resins on the nose. Surprisingly, the aroma is less citrus even though there was a fair amount of Cascade and Simcoe in the dry hop. Although this was fermented with WB-06, there are no clove or banana notes on the nose and it wasn’t intended either. It was intentionally fermented at a slightly higher temperature to avoid the lighter aromas that WB-06 would have in a wheat ale.

This is not a perfect IPA because the aroma is not as intense as I would like it to be, but it does fit other characteristics of an IPA fairly well. I do not have a tolerance towards highly bitter brews and this beer was brewed with just 40 IBUs and the 40 IBUs definitely show: it is a clean bitterness and does not overpower the beer at all. 

The beer finishes crisp on the palate, it is slightly sweet but very drinkable with no overpowering characteristic. If I brew this beer again, and there are very good chances I will, I will tweak it to have a more hoppy nose and a less amber color, and that’s about all the changes I would want in it.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Tasting Day: Summer Wheat Ale

Recipe and Brewday here.

The first thing I understood from this beer was that I screwed up the carbonation. Even after an aggressive pour, it just had a plain jane 2-3 mm thick head. It stuck around for some time and then receded to give way to a clear headless beer.


Baring that one glitch, this beer has a lot going for it. Without much effort on my part, it is a much clearer beer than most of my other light beers. It was fermented with WB-06 and has light banana notes on the nose. The low bitterness makes this an easy drinking beer; it is easily a lawn mower beer and can be paired with a burger or pizza.

This is a no-fuss, session beer with no overpowering notes or complex layers. Its not a beer that will start off a conversation about how it was brewed or what its grain bill was or what techniques were used. Since this was brewed along with the Cream Ale, I intended the end result to be a beer that ends up being sessionable like the Cream Ale for loads of afternoon or evening drinking.


And it seems this wheat beer serves its purpose pretty well.

Monday, September 14, 2015

Tasting Day: Watermelon Wheat

Recipe and Brewday here.

Quite easily, this isn’t one of the better beers I’ve brewed and tasted thus far!! From the image below, it is easy to think I’m joking, but I’m not.


The beer pours with a beautiful blonde color and a quick thick head. That head sticks around for some time and if observed closely, the lacing on the glass is good too. In fact, unlike some of my other low gravity beers, the head does stick around longer and even when it looks like its gone, the head is still around the edges of the glass.

On the nose, there is a fairly fresh, pronounced watermelon aroma and that almost instantly changes to a certain dank aroma. This unwanted dank, vegetal aroma is completely overwhelming and changes your perception of the beer almost instantly. I have figured out why this happened: I worked quickly with the watermelon and may have gotten some of the white pith in the puree and I may have left it longer than I wanted in the secondary.

This is a fairly light bodied beer where the wheat stands out and (unfortunately) the watermelon dankness stands out even more. This is a perfect beer to drink on a warm day and if I were to chug it down quickly enough, I wouldn’t notice any of the aromas at all. But being a brewer, I have to take a whiff of it and describe the aromas and when that happens, the look on my face is good enough to tell others a bit about the beer if we had a group tasting.


Per se, the beer isn’t bad. I’ve had worse beer so this wouldn’t be bad enough to give one an upset tummy but the beer wouldn’t be classified as good either.

Will I brew this beer again? Now that I have identified the reasons why that dank, vegetal aroma and flavor exists in the beer, I will brew it again and perhaps add watermelon to some of my other low gravity beers too.

All said and done, I wouldn’t think of sharing this beer with anyone unless they really, really want it.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Brew Day: Wannabe Wit

CAVEAT: If you’re looking for a traditional Wit recipe, please look elsewhere.

I have wanted to make a Wit for some time now, but I hesitated on most occasions only because I didn’t have the right grains. Wheat is equally important to a Wit as is the Pilsner or Pale Ale malt but I ran out of Wheat malt with my 3 wheat beers: Wheat Stout, Amber Wheat IPA and the Watermelon Wheat.

I had everything else: Pilsner malt, the hops, the orange (or citrus) peel, fresh coriander and the yeast. Just not the Wheat malt. But the urge to brew a Wit only increased ever since I started liking the smaller, simple beers after I tasted the Cream Ale.

But then what the heck: this may not be a perfect, to-the-point Wit, but it will certainly have the other elements that make a Wit. And with that in mind, I decided to brew a Pilsner-only Wit.

There are two elements of the Wit I had an issue with: the orange peels and the coriander, or the amount of each thereof. Most recipes I went through had additions of about a gram of coriander and a gram of orange peel per litre. Some of the recipes pushed those amounts higher. To be on the safe side and indeed enjoy what I drink, I decided to stick to just a gram of each per litre. Of course, I will gauge both these elements when I taste the beer and that should give me an idea of how accurate or inaccurate I am with the orange peel and coriander additions.

There was quite a bit of washed WB-06 from all the wheat ales that I brewed earlier and that was enough for this low gravity Wit. Bitterness was calculated to under 20 IBUs for easy drinking.

The more I explore Wits, the more I realize about the potential this beer presents the brewer with and the extent I can push it to. I will have a proper Wit recipe sometime in future and then work on additions to that recipe and see how they go.

For now, this is a Wannabe Wit.

Wannabe Wit

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 8 litres
Type: All Grain
IBU: 17
SRM: 4
OG: 1.048

Grains and Sugars
1.66 kg Pilsner Malt

Hops
3 grams Aurora @ 45 min.

Other Additions
Added 8 grams orange peels @ 5 min.
Added 8 grams freshly crushed coriander @ 5 min.

Yeast
Fermentis WB-06 Wheat Beer Yeast

Schedules
Mash at 66°C for 60 minutes
Batch sparged at 80°C for 30 minutes
Boiled for 45 minutes.

Notes
I took a whiff of the fermenter and the aroma of the orange peels stood out. The coriander, not so much but I'm hoping for everything to come together when I bottle it.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Tasting Day: Wheat Stout

Recipe and Brewday here.

The first time I had a stout was on a trip to Singapore in 2010. I didn’t know it was a stout; I referred to it as a black beer. And I did not like it at the time. It was a Guinness Stout with the roasty, malty, slight coffee-ish flavors and aromas. I didn’t like it because I was expecting it to be the same as very other lager with a change in the color. Of course, Arthur Guinness had other ideas when he brewed this stout. I only finished the beer because I paid 8 SGD for it and didn’t want to waste it. From those naïve days, I have moved over to craft beers and have come to appreciate stouts.

The reason I told you this story is because, to put it simply, this wheat stout largely reminds me of those very same roasted, malty, coffee-ish flavors and aromas that I hated but now love. The aromas and flavors are not exactly the same, but it reminds me more or less of the ‘black beer’. To most folks, it could sound a bit off since Guinness makes their stouts with barley and this stout has wheat in the grain bill, but each drinker has their own perspectives and conclusions of the beers they drink.


This stout pours with a black color but on closer inspection, the beer is really a very, very dark brown with hints of ruby close to the top of the glass. One thing this beer has is a lot of head. On the first pour, I slowed down and stopped pouring simply because the head formed too quickly. In time, I was able to pour a full glass of beer. The head is tan, thick and persistent. It takes a bit of time to settle into a half finger thick foam and then slowly form a bubbly rim around the glass.

On the nose, as I mentioned earlier, it does have a lot of those roasty, coffee aromas. The aromas are strong and continue to persist irrespective of the amount of beer in the glass. A sip of this beer brings all of those aromas and flavors in liquid form and it is good. This beer is strong but very drinkable.

One of things I set out to do when I brewed this stout was to have a lesser roasted characteristic than the Foreign Extra Stout and I seem to have achieved it. Black Malt wasn’t in the gain bill and it really shows in 2 ways: one, the less roasted characteristics help make this beer a more drinkable one; and two: the color of the beer, although it’s a stout, is actually a very, very dark brown. Maybe a bit of black malt may have helped the color but that’s a recipe for another day.

This stout is medium bodied and enjoyable. I will age a small batch of this stout for a few months till, say, winter when I expect the flavors to mellow down a bit and then I plan on having a parallel tasting with the Eis Stout.

Monday, August 31, 2015

Eis That Beer

Eis Beer: Pronounced as if it were ‘Ice Beer’.

Eis beer is a concentrated version of a regular beer and this concentration is carried out by freezing the beer for a few hours and then letting it thaw out. The beer is not allowed to thaw out completely as some of the ice crystals are discarded. On tasting various Eis beers, it has been noted that it has a much more smoother as compared to its non-Eis versions. Freezing the beer also removes some of the hops bitterness and tannins. Alcohol does not freeze but water does and the loss of water increases the alcohol concentration of the beer.


I intentionally brewed 10 liters of my Wheat Stout so I could Eis 2 liters of it. Once the fermentation was complete, I measured out 2 liters of the beer and put it in the freezer just before I went to bed. The next day I put the ice block on a strainer and allowed it to thaw for some time. The ice block almost immediately collapsed because the alcohol had not frozen and this left some smaller blocks of ice in the strainer that I left to continue thawing for some time. 

After about half an hour, the remaining ice blocks has lost most of its color and I got about 1.5 liters of beer. I primed with a much lesser amount of sugar than I usually prime with, bottled it and then pushed it to the back of my cupboard.

The reason I did that was because I have no intention of opening the beer in a month’s time. Instead I plan on opening it after ageing it for 6 months at the minimum. I prefer ageing bigger beers because the inherent alcohol note in an un-aged big beer is sharp, harsh and heady which ruins the drinking experience. Its like drinking a peaty, smoky scotch with a seafood platter and having that smoke and peat linger on throughout your meal thus overwhelming the delicate flavors of the seafood.

Eis beers are not available as widely as the other commercial craft beers are because of the sheer cost of brewing it. Initially, things seem fine, but if you observe closely the beers do carry a higher cost. I lost half a liter when I Eis-ed the stout. So that’s half a liter of hop bitterness (irrespective of how small it is), half a liter of water, half a liter worth of base, specialty and roasted malts and half a liter worth of fermentation. Half a liter isn’t much, but imagine the costs when a commercial brewery loses the aforementioned items because they don’t brewing small batches. And that loss causes the per serving cost of the Eis beer to shoot up. Which is why this beer makes perfect sense for a home brewer. You tend not to lose a lot if you plan properly and the only thing you need to worry about is trying to keep your hands off of the beer for a while.

The ageing process brings out the beer’s flavors, the alcohol mellows out slightly (but trust me, its very much there), and some of the hop bitterness fades away, all of which makes for a smoother drinking experience. I have not found a source anywhere on the internet that says a beer will lose the flavor and aroma compounds, so Eis-ing an IPA would make for an interesting beer. Of course, I wouldn’t age an Eis IPA since the dry hop flavor and aroma would simply cease to exist after 6 months of ageing.

Lastly, a simple piece of advice for folks who Eis their beers: share it.

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Brew Day: Amber Wheat IPA

I’ve only had one Wheat IPA so far. At Toit in Indiranagar. Referencing their website, Toit states that the grain bill contains Munich, Wheat and Caramel malts and it is dry hopped with Chinook and Citra. It was a fairly opaque, cloudy and dark brown colored beer. And it made for one good IPA too.

With quite a bit of wheat malt on my hands and inspired by Toit’s offering, I decided to brew a Wheat IPA too. I have had a few nice, worthy IPAs and I’ve brewed some too but never one with wheat in the grain bill. So this was a bit of a challenge. With the grains at home, I decided to stick to the basics since this is my first Wheat IPA. My grain bill was just Pale Ale and Wheat, with a bit of dark caramel malts to deepen the color. This was done because my plan was to brew an Amber Wheat IPA.

My initial recipe had Aromatic malt too. But on later introspection, I decided to chuck Aromatic malt from the grain bill since I feared this would give the beer a bit of a stronger malty backbone and hide the wheat. I had some yeast starter left over from my other Wheat beers, Wheat Stout and Watermelon Wheat and that is what I used.

Once I finalized the grain bill, my next challenge was to zero in on the hops. IPAs are probably the more expensive beers brewed around the world due to the hops used in them and I may not be wrong in stating that the West Coast IPAs and the Imperial IPAs would be among the more expensive IPAs brewed. With that in mind, I decided on two hop additions during the boil to bring the IBUs to around 40. Of course, setting IBUs and maintaining it is easy for most beers. For an IPA the challenge is choosing which hops to dry hop with.

And that brought around some confusion. A fellow brewer gave me some Simcoe which I decided to use straight away. But I preferred 2 hops as part of the dry hopping regimen. Browsing through my hops (which isn’t a lot), I found some Cascade that I could use. The reason I stuck to two hops during the dry hop regimen was to keep things simple and not over complicate flavors and aroma in the IPA. There are IPAs out there with a lot more hops added during dry hopping but I guess simplicity has its charm.

Amber Wheat IPA (Tasting notes here)

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 8 litres
Type: All Grain
IBU: 40
SRM: 15
OG: 1.056

Grains and Sugars
900 grams Pale Ale
900 grams Wheat Malt
50 grams Crystal 120
50 grams Crystal 80
10 grams Roasted Barley

Hops
5 grams Aurora @ 45 min.
4 grams Northern Brewer @ 30 min.
7 grams Cascade, Dry hop, 5 days.
7 grams Simcoe, Dry hop, 5 days.

Yeast
Fermentis WB-06 Wheat Beer Yeast

Schedules
Mash at 66°C for 60 minutes
Sparged at 80°C for 30 minutes
Boiled for 45 minutes.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Tasting Day: Mad Hopper IPA #1

Recipe and Brewday here.

Technically it has been over two and a half months since I brewed the Mad Hopper IPA #1 and I first tasted it a few weeks ago. 

I then had another bottle a few days ago and I have to say that the IPA’s characteristics have changed since I last tasted it. It seems to have matured a bit, the piney, citrus aromas stand out and it is very well carbonated.


The beer pours with a cloudy amber hue and immediately forms a thick white head. The head sticks around for a bit initially and then settles into a half finger thick head foam. What I will state (and may even end up overstating it) is the aromas. The aroma was very noticeable when I popped open the bottle and when I poured the beer. It is a very pleasant citrus, grassy and piney aroma that didn’t overwhelm me. In fact, the aroma makes for a very pleasant drinking IPA but this is not a session IPA either. The amber color is largely from the caramelization of the malt extract since it was boiled for an hour.

This is a medium bodied beer and it tends to linger on the palate longer than most of my current beers which are light bodied. The bitterness is on the lower side for IPAs but then as a home brewer, I think I have the liberty to keep it that way. The head stuck around for some time as I slowly finished the beer but there was no lacing throughout the beer.

I plan on brewing more of these IPAs but the recipe will change based on what hops I have at home. All in all, this is a very comfortable, aromatic, hoppy beer that can be liked by most hop heads.

Monday, August 24, 2015

Brew Day: Watermelon Wheat

The folks who mass produce beer (or horse piss) may never understand craft beer and its drinkers. There is a world far beyond diluted, pale yellow, consistently boring lagers that the big brewers know about but don’t venture into it. With their large brewing equipment it should be easy to go craft, but the one single aspect of higher brewing cost holds them back.

Perhaps not in India, but in other parts of the world, big brewers regularly air their ads that feature bubbly yellow liquids in glasses, in the hands of consumers and regularly talk about the innovative brewing they continue to do. Innovation indeed!!

I was once a so called ‘horse piss’ drinker, but the switch to craft beer was simply a better choice. And the choices are endless: IPAs, blonde ales, barley wines, stouts, pale ales, wheat beers, rye beers etc.

So when there’s very little innovation in mass produced beer, they simply cannot draw craft beer drinkers back to their watered down beers. The reason I said this much about the big brewers and their 'innovation' is because of a twitter post by Anheuser-Busch that seem to insult craft beer, or in this case 21st Amendment’s Watermelon Wheat. If you can’t beat them, harry them. Of course, this wasn’t taken lying down by craft beer drinkers and they responded. Anheuser-Busch may have actually given publicity to 21st Amendment’s Watermelon Wheat.

This is one post that made me think of brewing a watermelon wheat since I had some wheat at home. The issue I faced was with the amount of watermelon to be added to the beer in the secondary. I spoke to another brewer who made a watermelon Hefeweizen and he stated that about 100ml of watermelon puree per liter of beer gives the finished product a faint amount of watermelon flavor. I haven’t tasted his watermelon Hefe and therefore I do not know what it tastes like but I decided to go ahead with the same calculations.

The bitterness and gravity of the beer is intentionally low to allow the watermelon to shine, although slightly and not overwhelm the beer. With the addition of the watermelon puree, the SRM is expected to change a bit and move to a slightly darker shade of yellow but it wont shift to red, reddish or orange. I will post my findings once I bottle the beer.

Watermelon Wheat (Tasting notes here)

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 8 litres
Type: All Grain
IBU: 12
SRM: 3.5
OG: 1.048

Grains and Sugars
910 grams Pilsner
730 grams Wheat Malt

Hops
2 grams Aurora @ 45 min.

Other Additions
Add 800 ml of fresh watermelon puree to the beer in secondary after a week of fermentation for 3 days.

Yeast
Fermentis WB-06 Wheat Beer Yeast

Schedules
Mash at 65.5°C for 60 minutes
Sparged at 80°C for 30 minutes
Boiled for 45 minutes.

Friday, August 21, 2015

Brew Day: Wheat Stout

I have professed my love for simple wheat beers but I am hopeless in getting to make an all grain Hefeweizen. I have WB-06 yeast at home, but some of my wheat beers have turned out to be awful. I can drink them but I just couldn’t share them with anyone. While those beers were simple wheat ales, and with a Summer Wheat Ale bottled up, I have jotted down a stout recipe with 50% wheat in the mash.

While we’re on the topic of stouts, the later bottles of the Foreign Extra Stout that I brewed had a certain pronounced roasted flavor to it. This flavor may be very welcome in a stout and there are people who appreciate a hearty roasted flavor, it did make the drinking difficult for me. I later googled to find that Black Patent Malt or Black Malt contributes quite a bit to this dark, roasted characteristic. I’m not stating that this is bad; I’m just stating a personal opinion and the opinion is that I would prefer to have a stout without a heavy roasted note to it.

With the grains available with me, I could have easily made an all-grain, low ABV stout with Pale Ale malt, but decided to lower the quantity of Pale Ale in the grain bill and add wheat to the mash along with a few dark grains minus the Black Malt. I haven’t had a wheat stout before so I do not how this would turn out until I drink it a few weeks later. The only wheat beer that I have had that was slightly different from the regular Hefes and Wits was the Wheat IPA at Toit. And it was good. Perfect bitterness, moderate to heavy hop aroma and a thick, chilled, slightly opaque beer.

For now this would be a slightly lower in strength than the Foreign Extra Stout. I had initially planned on brewing just 8 liters but then I bumped it up to 10 liters as I wanted to make an Eis Stout with 2 liters of the beer and then age it a couple of months. I will have a separate post for those interested in making Eis beers.

Wheat Stout (Tasting notes here)

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 10 litres
Type: All Grain
IBU: 38
SRM: 35
OG: 1.056

Grains and Sugars
1 kg Pale Ale
1 kg Wheat Malt
150 grams Crystal 120
150 grams Roasted Barley
150 grams Chocolate malt

Hops
15 grams Northern Brewer @ 45 min.

Yeast
Fermentis WB-06 Wheat Beer Yeast

Schedules
Mash at 65.5°C for 60 minutes
Sparged at 80°C for 30 minutes
Boiled for 45 minutes.

Tasting Day: Super Simple Cream Ale

Recipe and Brewday here.

After close to 4 weeks of carbonation, I opened a bottle of Cream Ale.


The hiss as I opened the bottle instantly told me that the beer had carbonated well. Even though I poured very slowly, a finger and half thick foamy white head formed instantly and this took time to settle down to a quarter-inch thick head. I swirled the glass around and the head formed again with a quarter-inch thick white foam.

The clean golden yellow, or sunshine yellow beer reminded me of the Palest Pale Ale I brewed a few months back. This, being a simple Cream Ale, was supposed to have no stand out aromas but I got a distinct lemon or citrus aroma which wasn’t expected because only one hop addition was carried out in total, that too for bitterness. On inhaling deeper, I could smell a faint sour note.

When bottling this, I was left with a half glass of beer that I drank. At the time, what I smelt was very different than what I tasted and it was no surprise today either. As is the case with most beers I brew, I took a fairly long sip. It was light bodied and I noticed almost instantly that there was a faint tartness to it but the beer was crisp and therefore very refreshing too. At 4% ABV, the beer was very drinkable and I finished off a bottle in no time.

My only gripe with this beer, and it is a small gripe, is the bitterness. While I targeted under 20 IBUs, the bitterness sticks out slightly more than I wanted. Maybe next time I’ll keep it lower.

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Brew Day: Summer Wheat Ale

I brewed a wheat ale some time back, the Honey Orange Wheat, but added orange peels and honey to it and ended up with a very flavourful wheat beer with overwhelming orange (kinnow) notes.

Its been a while but of late I had the urge to brew another wheat beer for some time now and I waited around for some of my grains to come in. There’s nothing interesting or specific about this wheat beer that would make it stand out other than the fact that it was not intended to be fermented with a wheat yeast. I planned to use S-04 from some of the harvested yeast from my previous beer. Which meant that it would be an American Wheat ale. Simple, unpretentious and a good drink on a summer’s day when you want to have a wheat beer.

I stuck to the basics: Pale Ale malt and Wheat, two simple ingredients and nothing else. If this fermented out completely I would end up with 5% ABV or slightly higher. I wanted the wheat to stand out and kept the IBUs close to the early 20s with a single bittering addition of Columbus.

Overall, my intention was to make an American Wheat ale that’s perfect for the summer.

Summer Wheat Ale (Tasting notes here)

Specifics
Batch size (litres): 8 litres
Type: All Grain
IBU: 21
SRM: 5
OG: 1.055

Grains and Sugars
1 kg Pale Ale malt
850 grams Wheat malt

Hops
6 grams Columbus @ 45

Yeast
Fermentis S-04 Ale Yeast

Schedules
Mash at 66°C for 60 minutes.
Batch sparged at 80°C.
Boiled for 45 minutes.

Notes
Because this is a light bodied, simple wheat beer, it gives a chance to lay around with  secondary to see if I can infuse flavours into it with some of the available fruit.