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Ben Evert.com

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Archive for February, 2007

Witbier

Posted by ben On February - 26 - 2007ADD COMMENTS

I must admit, I do like a good Belguim-styled beer, but I have never brewed one. This recipe looked rather easy, so I’m posting it. This recipe and others can be found at Belguimstyle.com

OLD TUDOR WITBIER
I have heard that it does not matter whether or not your wheat is malted. When in doubt I stick to traditional methods. The unmalted wheat (”soft” winter wheat) can be found in a health food store.

GRAIN BILL
5 lbs. Belgian Pilsner
4 lbs. Unmalted Wheat
1 lb. Honey Malt
1 lb. Wheat Malt
8 oz. Rolled Oats
HOP SCHEDULE
2.1 AAU Hallertauer for 30 minutes
2.9 AAU Saaz for 10 minutes
AAU: 5
ADJUNCTS
3/4 oz. Bitter Orange Peel (5 minutes)
3/4 oz. Corriander (knock out)
1/4 oz. Corriander (secondary)
YEAST
Brewtek Belgian Wheat
BREWING SPECIFICS
Combine 1 lb. of Pils malt, malted and raw wheat with 1 1/4 gallons of water in a 5 gallon pot (mini mash). Heat mini mash to 95 degrees and hold for 15 minutes. Raise to 125 and hold for 30 minutes. Raise to 155 and hold for 1 hour.
5 minutes from the end of the mini mash conversion, mash-in main grist with 3 1/2 gallons of water to achieve 125 degree protein rest.

Boil mini mash for 10 minutes and add to main mash, aiming to bring masher to 155 degrees. Hold for one hour. Raise to 165, hold for 5 minutes and sparge with 3 3/4 gallons.

Recommended boiling time: 45 minutes

SG:1.048



Popularity: 1% [?]

Small Curd Cottage Cheese

Posted by ben On February - 26 - 2007ADD COMMENTS

Ingredients

1. 1 gallon pastuerized skim milk
2. 1/8 teaspoon calcium chloride
3. 1 packet direct set mesophilic starter
4. Optional: 1-2 tablespoons heavy cream, cheese salt, herbs, or fruit

1. Heat the milk to 72 degrees. If using calcium chloride, add it now.
2. Add the starter and mix throughly. Cover and let stand at 72 degrees for 16-24 hours. The curd will be rather soft.
3. Cut the curd into 1/4 inch cubes and let stand for 15 minutes.
4. Increase the heat by one degree per minute until it reaches 100 degrees. Stir gently every few minutes to keep the curds from matting.
5. Maintain the temperature at 100 degrees for 10 minutes, stir occasionally.
6. Increase the temperature to 112 degrees over a 15 minute period.
7. Maintain the temperature at 112 degrees for 30 minutes or until the curds are firm. Test for firmness by squeezing a curd btween your thumb and forefinger.
8. When the curds are sufficiently cooked, let them settle to the bottom of the pot for 5 minutes.
9. Pour off the whey and pour the curds into a colander lined with cheesecloth. Tie the corners of the cheesecloth into a knot.
10. Let the bag drain for several minutes.
11. Rinse the bag in a bowl of ice water to cool and place the bag in a colander to drain for 5 minutes.
12. Untie the bag and place the curds in a bowl. Breal up any pieces that have matted. If desired, add heavy cream to produce a creamier mixture.
13. Add the salt, herbs or fruit to taste, if desired.



Popularity: 2% [?]

Homemade Butter

Posted by Ben On February - 25 - 2007ADD COMMENTS

Ingredients

1. 1 pint pasteurized heavy cream or whipping cream
2. 1/2 cup cold water
3. Cheese Salt (optional)

1. Let cream set at room temperature for several hours to ripen
2. Pour into a 1-quart canning jar with a tight-fitting lid and shake viqorously
3. After 5-10 minutes,when the butter has formed,pour off the liquid buttermilk and spoon the solids into a bowl
4. Add the water and press with the back of the spoon to help expel more buttermilk. Pour off the excess liquid and continue adding cold water and expelling buttermilk until the liquid runs clear.
5. Add salt to taste. Refrigerate overnight. This butter will keep for up to 1 week.

Yield is about 8 ounces

I like to use 1 pint jars instead of the quart jars. Also, do not use ultra-pasteurized cream. If you do, use a cheese starter and let the cream ripen for about 18 hours.



Popularity: 2% [?]

Hard Cider

Posted by ben On February - 24 - 2007ADD COMMENTS

Hard Cider

September 28, 2003

3 Gallons

Quantity

Ingredient

2 Gallons

Cider

1 Gallon

Apple Juice

½ Teaspoon

Yeast Nutrient

1

Campden Tablet

1 Pack

Narbonne Yeast

1 Pack

Cotes De Blanc Yeast

6 Cups

Sugar

7

Cloves

Original Gravity 1.080

Open Fermentation Used during Primary Fermentation

Racked October 4th 2003

Racked October 17th 2003, added 4 cloves, ¼ teaspoon orange peel, ¼ cinnamon stick and Hungarian oak chips per each gallon

 

 

Here is a recipe that I tried 2 years ago. It suprised me to how quickly it fermented and that it was ready to be used at Thanksgiving time. For a 2 month old wine, it was really good

 

 



Popularity: 1% [?]

Wine Grapes – Part 5

Posted by ben On February - 23 - 2007ADD COMMENTS

Part 5 in the Series

Last part of the Wine Grape Series

The Sauvignon Blanc grape produces wines of distinction in most of the areas where it is grown. It can tolerate greater heat than many varieties. Sauvignon Blancs are higher in acid and often exhibit ‘melon’ in the nose and tastes. If grown in too cool a climate, it can develop an herbal (’grassy’) character in its aromas. Sauvignon Blanc produces large crops and is a low cost variety.

It performs well in the Loire river and Bordeaux regions of France. Because it can get overpowered by the oak flavors, it is not often aged in wood. It can gain additional complexity and richness with that treatment. In the U.S. it is often known as Fume Blanc. New Zealand is having notable success with this variety and produces wines that have very high levels of acidity.

Sauvignon Blanc is often blended with small amounts of Semillion in order to ’round-out’ the taste of the wine.

Sauvignon Blanc is especially good when served with seafood.

 

Semillon grapes make up 80% of the blend in the most expensive and famous dessert wine in the world, Château d’Yquem. Semillon seems the favorite foil of Botrytis Cinerea, the noble rot which concentrates the sugars and flavors and intensifies the aromas for d’Yquem and the other “late-harvest” dessert wines of Monbazillac and Sauternes. These wines hold up spectacularly in antiquity, unique in the spectrum of unfortified wines. Consistently productive at six to eight tons per acre and of vigorous vines, semillon is easy to cultivate. It is fairly resistant to common vine diseases, with the notable exception of rot, which most often is hoped to be the noble type and not the destructive strain. This viticultural profile has led to widespread propagation and popularity of semillon vineyards.While semillon is the majority white variety in Bordeaux, Graves, and Sauternes, more grows in Chile than anywhere else on earth. Early in the viticultural development of Australia, semillon (often incorrectly labeled as Riesling) dominated as the major white variety, although the vineyards are mostly Chardonnay and sauvignon blanc today.   

The ripe semillon berry is a rich yellow color at maturity, although increasing sun exposure may turn it amber-pink. In warmer climates, there is always danger of sunburn and raisining. If processed as a dry or semidry table wine, the thin skins and tender, juicy pulp require speedy but gentle handling.

Viognier seemed literally an endangered variety only a few years ago, but seems to be recovering worldwide in both popularity and acreage. Less than 35 acres remained planted in all of France, its homeland, in the late 1960s. Its newest realm, California, has 2,001 acres as of 2002 (although a considerable portion is not yet mature enough to bear a commercial crop) and there are also relatively new plantings in Australia and Brazil, as well as other U.S. plantings in Colorado, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Texas, Virginia, and Washington.

The major drawback of the viognier grape is that it is a very shy producer and somewhat difficult to grow. Although drought tolerant, it is easily infected with powdery mildew in damp conditions or humid climates. Like many other varietals, viognier must be harvested at its peak of maturity in order to display its unique aroma and flavor character. The grape’s tendency to develop high sugar but low acid can result in wines with neutral, merely vinous flavors and high alcohol. These cultivation problems and producer desires to capitalize on the grape’s somewhat rarity combine to make many Viognier wines relatively expensive.

Probably the main attraction of Viognier is its potentially powerful, rich, and complex aroma that often seems like overripe apricots mixed with orange blossoms or acacia. With as distinctive and sweet an aroma-flavor profile as Gewürztraminer, Viognier is nevertheless usually made in a dry style and seems to appeal more to the typical Chardonnay drinker. The distinctive Viognier perfume holds up even when blended with a large portion of other grapes. The fruit usually has very deep color, but is somewhat low in acidity. As California wineries experiment with Viognier-Chardonnays, Viognier-Chenin Blancs, and Viognier-Colombards, this may be the grape’s ultimate destiny, as a blender.

Because the prime appeal of Viognier is its fresh and striking aroma, it is a wine that should be consumed young in most instances. The exception is Château Grillet, where the grapes are harvested early and the wine kept in oak for several months prior to bottling; this wine has a reputation for aging up to two decades.

Source: Winepros.org Cellarnotes.net

 

 


 

Popularity: 1% [?]

Wine Making In 8 Simple Steps

Posted by ben On February - 23 - 2007ADD COMMENTS

After about six years of wine making and learning about acid testing, pH, balance etc., you wonder if you can condense the process down to just a few simple steps. These simple steps are assuming the following:

1. You are going to use store bought juice’s. ie. Welch’s frozen or any other that does not have preservatives added;

2. You plan to consume your wine as early as possible, usually about 2 – 3 months after primary fermentation;

3. Your not out to win any awards but what something you can kick back with and enjoy.

I know many winemakers would cringe with the 3 assumptions above, but I feel there numerous people looking to get into winemaking and would like to take a simple approach. Or, maybe your are an experienced winemaker looking to make a batch for quick consumption. Either way, here are the simple steps to making wine.

This procedure is designed to make 1 ½ gallons which will probably end up being about 1 gallon bottled.

Procedure

1. Use two 11 ounce frozen juice to 1 gallon of must for a medium bodied wine. For a heavy bodied wine use 4 to a gallon. That means you will need 3 to 6 to make this batch.

2. Dump juice into your primary fermenter and add enough water to make 1 ½ gallons. Check the sugar content by using your hydrometer. If needed add enough sugar to bring the hydrometer reading to between 1.080 – 1.095. Retest after adding sugar and if higher that 1.095 dilute with a little water.

3. If you wish to, you can add two crushed campden tablets to your must. I really don’t think you need to since your must is pretty much sterilized. If you do add campden tablets, you will have to let the must sit for a day prior to adding the yeast.

4. Add your yeast nutrient

5. Add your yeast. Personally, I prefer to use half a packet of dry yeast.

6. Allow to ferment for 7 – 10 days then rack over to secondary fermenter.

7. If you plan to add oak chips, now is the time for that. Keep in the secondary for about 6 to 8 weeks. Rack again.

8. About 2 weeks after the last racking, you can begin to consume your masterpiece. I use either a 1 gallon or 2 gallon plastic water jug with a spout, if I plan on drinking my wine immediately. Otherwise, I just bottle it for later.

There you go. Eight simple steps to making wine. Nothing real hard about it and the best thing is that you can begin drinking it in about 2 to 3 months. Give it a whirl and let me know how your masterpiece turned out.




Popularity: unranked [?]

Wine Grapes – Part 4

Posted by ben On February - 22 - 2007ADD COMMENTS
Part 4 in the Series
Pinot blanc is a genetic mutation or clone of pinot gris, which is in turn, a clone of pinot noir. The leaf structure, clusters and berries so resemble Chardonnay that there are many vineyards in Europe where plantings of the two grapes are intermingled. This may have led to some confusion and mis-naming of grapes as “pinot chardonnay” (chardonnay is decidedly not of the pinot family).

Pinot blanc berry skins have an unusually high tannin content and the wines are prone to browning.

Pinot blanc is allowed in both the Mâconnais and wine labeled “Bourgogne Blanc”, but plantings are nearly phased out of the Burgundy appellation. There are still many pinot blanc vineyards in Alsace, where the variety sometimes is called Klevner.

Pinot Blanc cluster photo.Plantings are extensive in Italy, where the grape is known as pinot bianco. Many vintners there make relatively neutral-tasting, crisp, high-acid versions intended for early consumption. Due to its low aroma and high acid, high production clones of pinot blanc are also used for blending with muscat in Spumante.

There are vineyards in both Germany and Austria, where pinot blanc may be called Weissburgunder and is even made into a trockenbeerenauslese version. There is also much pinot blanc planted in Eastern Europe.

A considerable amount of pinot blanc is planted in Uruguay and Argentina. Most of the 1,000 or so acres of pinot blanc in California are planted in Monterey County.

Aroma in pinot blanc is very light, non-distinct, nearly neutral. It is balanced with high acid and can be full-bodied. California winemakers frequently get fairly good results by applying the same techniques as they might to Chardonnay, barrel fermentation, lees stirring, full malolactic, etc.

Pinot gris (or pinot grigio, as it is known in Italy) probably is the best-known “white” variant-clone of Pinot Noir. Ripe pinot gris grapes may be described as having colors from bluish grey to light pinkish brown. Clusters with a variety of colors are not unusual.

The variety can attain a very high level of sweetness, but will begin to lose acid rapidly when near to fully ripe. Sometimes it is used to add richness and to lighten, when blended with Pinot Noir.

Some pinot gris is grown in Burgundy, where it may be called pinot beurot. Where planted in Germany, it is known as ruländer. It is of little commercial significance in either locale. Friuli, in Italy, produces the largest quantity, but only two appellations have Pinot Gris stars in the wine quality galaxy: Alsace, France, the traditional base of Pinot Gris appreciation and Oregon, the newest Pinot Gris area to come to light.

In Alsace, the pinot gris grape is called tokay d’Alsace (no relation to the Hungarian Tokay). The Alsatians value it as a full-bodied wine that can stand up to food without introducing any flavors of its own. In Italy, Pinot Grigio can be quite distinguished, coming from some producers, especially in the Friuli region, who devote attention to growing and vinifying. Unfortunately for its reputation, there are many other Italian Pinot Grigio makers that overcrop and harvest early to produce crisp, but vapid wines.

Pinot Gris / Pinot Grigio is usually delicately fragrant and mildly floral with lightly lemon-citrus flavors. Depending upon ripeness at harvest and vinification technique, Pinot Gris can be tangy and light, or quite rich, round and full bodied. Made in an appropriate style, it is one dry white wine that may even age well.

The Riesling is considered on of the ‘noble’ grape varieties for wine making. It can produce wines of high acidity and elegance in very cool growing conditions. Its wines usually show fresh fruit flavors and a zesty character. Riesling has the ability to produce wines that run the gamut from bone dry to very sweet but are usually made in dry of semi-dry styles. It has perfumey aromas with peach and honeysuckle notes and can develop a ‘petrol’ nose as it ages.

Riesling does best in cool climates and is very resistant to frost. It is planted very widely in the northern European growing regions but is less popular in other areas of the world.

In the right circumstances, some of the finest sweet wines in the world can be made from Riesling that has been affected by Botrytis Cinerea. This mold attacks the skin of the grape and concentrates the sugars in the grape by allowing the water to evaporate. This is especially true in the Moselle and Rhine river valleys of Germany as well as the Alsace region of France. These wines are at the same time: wonderful, rare, expensive and long-lived.

Source: Winepros.org Cellarnotes.net



Popularity: unranked [?]

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