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Sunday, July 20, 2014

Bottle Day: O.A.T. Ale

Another day - another batch of beer to bottle.  Today I bottled two batches of O.A.T.  This is the new name for the Oat And Tansy beer me and my friend Mike created.  There are two versions that were bottled.  One was with minimal hops (4 hop pellets) and a lot of tansy.  The other batch was regular hop dose with minimal tansy added during the aroma/flavor timing of the boil.

First up if the OAT with Burton ale yeast and minimal hops:
This is the beer that I have not been too fond of from the first tasting while transferring over to the secondary.  It had a weird taste then and it still does.  One would assume this is the tansy and the fact that it lacks the regular hop flavor/bitterness you expect in a beer.  To make things even more discouraging is there was a very small pellicle.  When brewing a clean beer like this, it is a bad sign to see one of these guys.  I tasted the beer and it still tasted similar to what I tasted two weeks ago so I decided to go for it.  There may have been a small leak in the seal on the lid that let air into the bucket or the lack of hops could have left the beer susceptible to unwanted microorganisms that hops can usually fight off.  If anything this beer is becoming more and more "authentic" because most brews back in the day were probably "contaminated".

Next up was the OAT with American Farmhouse yeast.  This was the most promising batch of the two when we racked the secondary two weeks ago and that still holds true.  This batch also had a pellicle but there is brett in the American Farmhouse yeast.  So after some aging I would expect to see this.  The flavor on this one is pretty unique.  Fruity up front, funky and weird on the back end with some support from the tansy.  This should be a fun beer to try out.

Both batches should be ready in two weeks.  Hopefully whatever is going on in the Burton Ale yeast batch is OK and those beers are still good to drink when its time to taste them. Fingers crossed until then.

Don't forget that we still have a batch aging on Brett Brux.  I will let this go in the primary for one more week and then transfer over to the secondary.  I plan to put a small amount of oak in it to replicate "barrel aging".  I will let it sit for about two months and start checking the gravity to see if the Brett has more work to do or not.
Check back for updates on that as things progress.


Saturday, July 19, 2014

Bottle Day - Pliney the Elder IPA Clone

Today was bottle day for the Pliney the elder clone that I have brewed up.  I am interested in using carb tablets so today I tested the Brewers Best carb tablets.  I went with 4 tablets per bottle which should give me "medium" carbonation.  The photo you see on the left is the hop residue left over.  This was all from dry hoping and there is no yeast on the bottom.  That is one inch of hops sitting on the bottom with a good lacing on the carboy.  I strained the beer through a hop bag when going into the bucket to clear it out.

The smell is very nice right now.  As you can guess, its very hop forward but it has a sweetness in the smell.  Very fruity.

The taste matches the nose.  It's very fruity and sweet up front but it finished with a very bitter bite.  This should be an interesting beer.  Here's to hoping that the carb tablets work well and we have a great beer in two weeks.


Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Sour Stout: Quick Tasting Note

I am getting really bad at posting things on time.  Case in point - July 3rd my friend had a good ol' 'Merican picnic/party.  This was three weeks or so after I primed one 750mL bottle of sour stout.  This was a test for a few things.


  1. I wanted to see how carbonation drops work with sour beers.  I have had issues with batch priming.  (After reading American Sour Beers I think I have some new things to try out)
  2. I just wanted to taste the beer carbonated to see if it needed to age.  The reason I wanted to do this is because I am learning I am not too good at determining how a beer will taste once it is bottled.  I tasted a few sours before bottling and thought the sourness and funk where perfect. Only to find once they were bottled... they weren't nearly as good as I thought.
With these two things in mind I went ahead and brought the unknown (quality) of beer to the part to try out with a few friends who can tolerate soured beer.

It was dark so my tasting notes are pretty bad.  I couldn't see the beer.  Only smell, taste and mouthfeel.

Smell - It smells exactly like Tart of Darkness from the Bruery.  The beer I produced was based on the recipe they provided to MoreBeer.com.  So far so good.

Taste - Amazing.  FInally! I have been hard at work with my brewing time trying out "Quick-Sour" methods while my first batch of Red Sour and Dark Sour aged.  18 months later I am finally seeing some rewards!  This was a perfect beer.  It tasted very much like Tart of Darkness.  I can easily compare this beer to that great commercial example.  My one friend remarked after the party that he thought it was a commercial beer.  Impressed that I made something that good.  So much for friends having confidence in your brewing right!

Body - Perfect carbonation and body.  It looked like the bottle was going to be a gusher but it ended up being ok.  Couldnt be happier

Overall - By far - miles upon miles - the best sour beer I have made.  Now the only issue is to replicate this throughout a whole bottle day.  This quick process has inspired me to pull another 750 mL and bottle for a taster.  This time it is from the barrel that is currently holding 3 gallons of 18+month old Sour Red ale and 2 gallons of 4-month old Clean Red ale.  I will do a quick posting on that once its ready in about a week.

Friday, July 11, 2014

Follow Up: Tansy/Mugwort Oat Ale

I moved the Tansy/Mugwort ale to the secondary fermentor this week.  Not too much to report on other than the small tasting and aroma at this point.

The tansy heavy beer brewed with Burton yeast is pretty gnarly.  It has a super ripe fruit smell with this weird medicinal thing going on.  Not many hops were added (4-8 pellets) so this is mostly coming from the tansy.  There was no signs of infection or lacto/brett taking place so the tansy is really shining through on this one.  The taste was not super impressive but it left that weird sensation on the tongue that we experienced with while drinking the tea during the brew day.  At this point I feel the carbonation will provide some brightness that the beer is lacking and hopefully the flavors will meld together a bit more now that it is off the dead yeast from primary fermentation.

The other batch to move over to secondary fermentation was the American Farmhouse ale.

The American Farmhouse ale version is slightly funky with a bit of farmyard aromas going on.  It currently tastes like a summer saison with some extra grassy flavors along with that mysterious flavor that the tansy provides.  I have high hopes for this one.  It seems to be on a path that could provide a unique type of saison with that extra special herb providing some mystery as you drink it.

The color on all of the beers is a very pretty hay yellow.  Not nearly as cloudy as the mash was showing us.  It cleared up really nice for having 75% of the grains being some sort of oat.

The version we brewed with Brett Brux will sit for another week before getting a hydrometer reading.  If all seems well we will move that over to secondary and then just start testing for stability in the FG reading.

Friday, July 4, 2014

Brew Day: Tansy/Mugwort Oat Ale


Mike poses manning one of the two brew kettles
So the previous post was all about the research and how Mike and I decided on our recipe and how we were going to break the recipe into different batches to see how they taste.

Today is a quick recap of the brew day.

The biggest concern I had was how the malted oat was going to act.  I read that it could gum up the mash and I also read that it acts just like regular malt like 2-row and causes no issues.  So we really had no idea what to expect.

We mashed in and hit our target temp and let is sit for an hour.  During this time we made a tansy tea. We just took some of the sparge water and put it into a coffee much with a tea strainer filled with tansy.  To our surprise it was actually pretty sweet and not too bitter at all.  We knew it could change with the boiling temperatures it would be used at but we were still taken back by how sweet/herbal it really was.

After the hour, we batch sparged three times to get all of the wort that we would need for our two kettle system. One kettle would be mostly tansy, while the other would just get a small dose of tansy at the end.  We decided to add the small dose to the other batch once we smelled the brew during the boil.  It was an intoxicating smell.  It was somewhere between rosemary and thyme with a bit of a bitter smell.  Not strong though.  Smelling that, we had to add some tansy to the mostly hop forward beer we were creating with the oats.

After an hour boil we force chilled and then pitched the yeasts.  Here is the final batches and how the ended up.

1 gallon - Mostly fuggles hops with Tansy added with 15 minutes left. Fermenting with Burton Ale and Brett. Brux.

2 Gallons - Mostly fuggles hops with Tansy added with 15 minutes left.  Fermenting with American Farmhouse Ale yeast.

2 Gallons - Tansy with just a few pellets of fuggles.  Fermenting with Burton Ale yeast.

The Burton/Tansy combo was the slowest to start fermentation.  The American Farmhouse was the fastest and started within 24 hours.  The others started somewhere between 32 and 42 hours.

We will rack to secondary fermentation for another two weeks and then get them bottles once the gravity is stable.