Some friends and I were passing around ideas like we always do about homebrewing and the furtherance of the gospel. We thought, how could homebrewing lead to Jesus? So we decided to try something out. We're going to start a small community venture called Cana. Why Cana? Well, for starters Jesus turned the water into wine in the city of Cana at the start of His ministry. This occurs in John 2. You can read it here, which is also the site for our community ramblings, recipes, and other random tidbits.
Here is the blog address: www.canahomebrewclub.blogspot.com
We'll likely be meeting on the first Saturday of each month at my house to start. We'll brew a batch or two of beer, discuss and engage the Bible (probably to start by looking at everything the Bible has to say about alcohol, both good and bad), and enjoy being in community with one another. Meetings will generally last about 4-5 hours (length of time to brew a batch of beer), although everyone is free to come and go as they wish. Each meeting will also be the tasting of the previous meetings beer, so there's the incentive to come back! Also, a suggested donation of $5 will help cover expenses and keep the venture going. More details will come eventually, but all are invited (21+ that is due to US alcohol laws).
Friday, July 20, 2012
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Lawnmower IPA
I've been wanting to experiment with a lower ABV IPA for a while now and finally got around to doing it. So often in order to get really big hop flavor you have to have a higher ABV beer. I'd like to have a lower ABV beer with really big hop flavor (one of the reasons I like Bitter American from 21A so much). So this is my first attempt at a "lawnmower beer" in the IPA department. Here's the details...
Recipe:
5.5 gallons
Fermentables:
8 lb GW 2-Row
12 oz Crystal 40L
8 oz Carahell
4oz Dextrose
Anticipated OG: 1.047
Actual OG: 1.046
Anticipated FG: 1.013
Actual FG: 1.010
Anticipated ABV: 4.4%
Actual ABV: 4.7%
Hops:
161 Calculated IBU's
1oz CTZ for 60m
1oz Summit for 60m
1oz CTZ for 30m
1oz Summit for 30m
1oz Centennial at flameout
1oz Cascade at flameout
2oz CTX hopback (used my mash tun)
1oz Centennial for 7 days dryhop
1oz Cascade for 7 days dryhop
Yeast:
Safale 05
Notes:
I had been reading about hopbacks and using them while brewing. I'm not sure how I didn't come across this before or pay attention to it, but decided it was time to put it into play. I first tried to convert a thermos into a hopback that could also be used as a randalizer in the beer line, but I probably rushed it and failed. I'll retry that another time. So I then thought maybe I could drain the boiled wort into my cleaned out mash tun with 2oz of CTZ in it which would filter the hops out as it then entered my wort chiller. That worked perfectly. It's now fermenting in my basement and should be ready to transfer to secondary in a couple more days. I brewed this last Friday (7/13/12).
Also I once again ended up about a gallon short after the boil so I added a gallon of water to the wort. I'll have to figure out how to adjust Brewpal for that.
Update 7/21/12: Racked to secondary. FG was 1.010 so ABV is about 4.7%. Added 1oz of Centennial and 1oz of Cascade.
Recipe:
5.5 gallons
Fermentables:
8 lb GW 2-Row
12 oz Crystal 40L
8 oz Carahell
4oz Dextrose
Anticipated OG: 1.047
Actual OG: 1.046
Anticipated FG: 1.013
Actual FG: 1.010
Anticipated ABV: 4.4%
Actual ABV: 4.7%
Hops:
161 Calculated IBU's
1oz CTZ for 60m
1oz Summit for 60m
1oz CTZ for 30m
1oz Summit for 30m
1oz Centennial at flameout
1oz Cascade at flameout
2oz CTX hopback (used my mash tun)
1oz Centennial for 7 days dryhop
1oz Cascade for 7 days dryhop
Yeast:
Safale 05
Notes:
I had been reading about hopbacks and using them while brewing. I'm not sure how I didn't come across this before or pay attention to it, but decided it was time to put it into play. I first tried to convert a thermos into a hopback that could also be used as a randalizer in the beer line, but I probably rushed it and failed. I'll retry that another time. So I then thought maybe I could drain the boiled wort into my cleaned out mash tun with 2oz of CTZ in it which would filter the hops out as it then entered my wort chiller. That worked perfectly. It's now fermenting in my basement and should be ready to transfer to secondary in a couple more days. I brewed this last Friday (7/13/12).
Also I once again ended up about a gallon short after the boil so I added a gallon of water to the wort. I'll have to figure out how to adjust Brewpal for that.
Update 7/21/12: Racked to secondary. FG was 1.010 so ABV is about 4.7%. Added 1oz of Centennial and 1oz of Cascade.
Labels:
Bitter Ale,
diy,
homebrew,
Hops,
IPA,
recipes,
session beer
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Widmer Drop Top Amber Clone
It's been a while since I've done an amber and I've always like Drop Top, so why not brew one! I found a recipe for this from a commercial home brew supply store online and I just copied their recipe and then ordered the goods from Brew Brothers. Half as much money that way and they delivered! Seriously, if you don't go to Brew Brothers and you live within an hour of Hillsboro, Oregon, you're wasting your money. Plus their selection is crazy good. Anyways, here's what I did...
Recipe:
5.5 Gallons
Grains:
8.25 lb GW 2-Row
.5 lb Crystal 10L
.5 lb Honey Malt
.5 lb Special B Malt
8oz Lactose (Milk Sugar) added at the start of the boil
Mash:
Strike: 3.66gallons at 170 degrees.
Sparge: 4.19 gallons at 170 degrees.
Anticipated OG: 1.051
Actual OG: 1.054
Final Gravity: 1.013
ABV: 5.4%
Hops:
.25oz CTZ for 60m
.5oz Magnum for 60m
1oz Northern Brewer for 10m
It was supposed to be Magnum for 1oz for a full hour, but I only had .5oz and didn't want to buy more that I wouldn't use right away. Since I had so much CTZ, I figured for the bittering it would be close enough.
Yeast:
Safale 05. This is my first time using this one. Fermented fast even without a starter.
Notes:
Brewed back on June 22, but I forgot to post about it. The mash/boil gave out less wort than I should have had, so I added about 3/4 a gallon of water after the boil. This gave me the right gravity as well as enough wort.
Update 7/3/12: Racked to secondary and got the final gravity at 1.013. Right on target. The flavor is really close to Drop Top. Probably a dead ringer. If you want some Drop Top, then this will do the job nicely! I'll update again after secondary and once it's on tap.
Recipe:
5.5 Gallons
Grains:
8.25 lb GW 2-Row
.5 lb Crystal 10L
.5 lb Honey Malt
.5 lb Special B Malt
8oz Lactose (Milk Sugar) added at the start of the boil
Mash:
Strike: 3.66gallons at 170 degrees.
Sparge: 4.19 gallons at 170 degrees.
Anticipated OG: 1.051
Actual OG: 1.054
Final Gravity: 1.013
ABV: 5.4%
Hops:
.25oz CTZ for 60m
.5oz Magnum for 60m
1oz Northern Brewer for 10m
It was supposed to be Magnum for 1oz for a full hour, but I only had .5oz and didn't want to buy more that I wouldn't use right away. Since I had so much CTZ, I figured for the bittering it would be close enough.
Yeast:
Safale 05. This is my first time using this one. Fermented fast even without a starter.
Notes:
Brewed back on June 22, but I forgot to post about it. The mash/boil gave out less wort than I should have had, so I added about 3/4 a gallon of water after the boil. This gave me the right gravity as well as enough wort.
Update 7/3/12: Racked to secondary and got the final gravity at 1.013. Right on target. The flavor is really close to Drop Top. Probably a dead ringer. If you want some Drop Top, then this will do the job nicely! I'll update again after secondary and once it's on tap.
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