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Ben Evert.com

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Archive for the ‘Speciality Beers’ Category

Schwartzpils

Posted by ben On May - 3 - 20101 COMMENT

Ingredients


* 9.5 lbs. (4.3 kg) Weyermann Pilsner malt
* 5.5 oz. (155 g) Weyermann SINAMAR® malt color extract
* 6 AAU Tettnanger hops (60 min)
* (1.5 oz./43 g of 4% alpha acids)
* 2.5 AAU Hallertau Mittelfrüh hops (15 min)
* (0.5 oz./14 g of 5% alpha acids)
* 1 oz. (28 g) Tettnanger hops (0 min)
* Wyeast 2042 (Danish Lager) or White Labs WLP850 (Copenhagen Lager) yeast
* (3.5 qts./~3.5 L yeast starter)


Step by Step


Step mash with a 20 minute rest at 122 °F (50 °C), a 30 minute rest at 148 °F (64 °C), a 30 minute rest at 162 °F (72 °C) and mash out to 169 °F (76 °C). Boil for 2 hours, adding hops at times specified in ingredient list. Add liquid malt color with 15 minutes remaining in boil. Ferment at 50 °F (10 °C) followed by a diacetyl rest at 55 °F (13 °C) for 3 days.

Extract with grains option:


Replace Pilsner malt with 5.66 lbs. (2.6 kg) of Weyermann Bavarian Pilsner liquid malt extract and 2.0 lbs. (0.91 kg) Pilsner malt. Steep Pilsner malt for 45 minutes at 148 °F (64 °C) in 0.75 gallons (2.8 L) water. Add water to “grain tea” to make 2.5 gallons (9.5 L) of wort. Boil 60 minutes, adding malt extract with 15 minutes left in boil.


Source: Brew Your Own

Photo by: gimpbully 

Real Root Beer

Posted by ben On November - 9 - 2009Comments Off

5 gallons, partial mash


Ingredients:


2 lbs. crushed mild ale malt
1 lb. dark crystal malt, 120° Lovibond
0.25 lb. black malt
0.25 lb. chocolate malt
3 lbs. unhopped dark dry malt extract
0.5 lb. dark unsulphured molasses
4 oz. maltodextrin powder
1 oz. Cluster hop pellets (7% alpha acid), for 60 min.
0.5 oz. sassafras bark
0.5 oz. sarsaparilla bark
1 oz. dried wintergreen leaves
0.5 oz. shredded licorice root
pinch sweet gale (optional)
pinch star anise (optional)
pinch mace (optional)
pinch coriander (optional)
dash black cherry juice (optional)
10 to 14 g. dry ale yeast
2 oz. lactose powder
7/8 cup corn sugar
0.5 cup spice tea (pinch wintergreen, sarsaparilla, licorice root)
corn sugar for priming


Step by Step:

In 1 gal. water mash crystal, black, chocolate, and mild ale malts at 155° F for 60 minutes. Sparge with 1.5 gals. at 170° F. Add 1 gal. water to kettle and bring to a boil. Add dark dry malt, maltodextrin, and molasses. Stir well to avoid scorching. Add Cluster hops and boil 60 minutes. At kettle knockout steep your spice combination (in a mesh bag) as wort cools. Pour into fermenter and top up to 5.25 gals. Cool to 75° F and pitch ale yeast. Ferment seven to 10 days at about 70° F, rack to secondary, and condition at 60° F for two weeks. Prime with corn sugar, add strained spice tea (1/2 cup boiling water over spices for at least a half hour), and bottle. Age two to three weeks cool (55° F).
Alternatives and Options:

Non-alcoholic creamy version: Instead of fermenting the wort, cool to 75° F, substitute 5 to 7 g. dry champagne yeast for the ale yeast, and bottle immediately. Store at 70° F for two or three days, then refrigerate. Follow these instructions exactly, otherwise you risk exploding bottles. You may also use ale yeast, which is somewhat safer because it will not continue to ferment in cold temperatures. However, the bubbles will not have that fine champagne quality. A safer way to carbonate: Get a CO2 system and either put your root beer in 5-gal. soda kegs (force carbonated) or get Carbonater-brand couplings and bottle in 2-liter PET bottles (force carbonated at 25 to 28 psi, chilled and shaken well).

Source: BYO

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Hard Apple Cider

Posted by ben On October - 13 - 2008Comments Off
It's not beer and it's not wine, but making hard apple cider is always fun. You can do it the old fashioned way by pressing the apples or you can purchase the apple cider. If you purchase the cider, just make sure that there are no preservatives in it. Personally, I buy the apple cider from a local fruit market. The recipe I found is from Sallys-Place.com and will make a 5 gallon batch. There is also an interesting history of hard cider on that site that is worth reading. Enjoy the recipe and the reading.

Cidermaking is easy and fun. Here is a basic recipe for a Farmhouse Style cider (ingredients for five gallons):

5 gallons of fresh pressed sweet apple juice (known today as apple cider)

5 cups of sugar

1 package of Wyeast liquid lager brewers yeast (available at homebrew supply stores)

Transfer the juice and sugar using a sanitized funnel or food grade plastic hose into a sanitized glass or stainless-steel container at room temperature. Allow the sugar to dissolve and then pitch the lager yeast and affix a fermentation lock atop the carboy It will soon begin to bubble away releasing carbon dioxide as the yeast converts the sugars into alcohol. Allow the cider to ferment and mellow for at least two months before transferring it with your sanitized food grade hose into bottles, a keg, or any vessel you prefer. Then enjoy. Any homebrew supply shop can get you started with the proper advice and equipment.


Originally Posted on my other site: Making Homemade Wine and Beer.


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German Altbier

Posted by ben On September - 1 - 2008Comments Off



Original Gravity: 1.048 IBU: 40



Please read these instructions completely before beginning your brew.








Ingredients:


6.6# (2 cans) Amber Liquid Malt Extract (LME)

0.3# (5 oz.) Light Dry Malt Extract (DME)
2# Crushed German Vienna Malt 3L
2# Crushed German Light Munich Malt 6L

1# Crushed German Crystal Malt 60L (Caramunich III)

1.5 oz. German Hallertau Hop Pellets (bittering)

0.5 oz. German Hallertau Hop Pellets (flavor)

1 oz. Tettnang Hop Pellets (aroma)

1 Whrlfloc Tablet (Irish Moss)

150ml Tube Wyeast 1007 German Ale Yeast

Muslin Grain Bag


Procedure
:


Begin by soaking the cans of LME in a bowl or pot of warm water to make it easier to get out of the can later.
Fill your brewpot (preferably a 20qt. stainless stock pot) with two gallons of cold water.

Place the crushed grains in the muslin grain bag and secure with a knot at the top. Place the bag into the brewpot and begin heating the water. When the water reaches a temperature of 170F remove the bag and discard.

Continue heating the water until it reaches a boil. When the water is boiling, remove the pot from the heat and slowly add the LME and the DME stirring constantly to avoid scorching. When thoroughly mixed return the brewpot to the heat and return to a boil.

BEWARE OF THE BOILOVER! When the mixture first boils it may produce a heavy foam. Watch for the foam to rise, and when it does, turn off the flame until the foam subsides (if using an electric stove, it may be necessary to lift the brewpot off of the burner). After the foam has risen once, it will generally lessen, and it’s safe to return to a steady boil without foaming over. However, sometimes foaming may occur again. If so, simply repeat this procedure until foaming finally stops.

After you have achieved a steady boil, add the bittering hops and continue boiling. After boiling for 30 minutes add the flavor hops. After boiling for 45 minutes add the Whirfloc Tablet. After boiling for 60 minutes remove the brewpot from the heat, add the aroma hops, and cover.


While the wort is cooling, fill your sanitized fermenter with 3 gallons of cold water. When the wort has cooled to under 100F, add it to the cold water in the fermenter (splashing is ok and even recommended to aerate the wort at this stage). Try to leave as much of the sediment on the bottom of the brewpot as you can (siphon if possible).

Take the temperature of the wort in your fermenter. It should be below 75F. Remove a sample to measure the Original Gravity with your hydrometer (do not return the sample to the fermenter when finished). Then add the yeast and seal your fermenter with an airlock (bucket) or blow-off hose (carboy) and place in a spot where the temperature stays between 65F and 70F. Within the next 24 hours fermentation should start.


You are now on the way to producing a delicious batch of homebrew – Cheers!

Source: Cape Cod Beer.Com

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