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Started By
Message
re: Homebrewing: Official Recipe Thread (All-Grain & Extract)
Posted on 12/20/13 at 4:28 pm to SouthOfSouth
Posted on 12/20/13 at 4:28 pm to SouthOfSouth
quote:
I had no clue how many Saison brewers we had up in here... 3 recipes already. I may have to get on this.
It's a really fun style to brew. I haven't used brett on anything yet, and not sure i will. I do have 2 saison's planned for next year. One will be a blood orange saison, and the other a saison similar to Goose Island Sofie, i'm calling French Benefits (using wyeast french saison yeast).
Posted on 12/20/13 at 4:56 pm to BMoney
quote:
BMoney
Do you use 2 S-04 yeast packets for that? 1.101 is waaay up there.

Posted on 12/20/13 at 5:16 pm to SouthOfSouth
quote:
Do you use 2 S-04 yeast packets for that? 1.101 is waaay up there.
I did. Obviously a yeast starter is ideal.
Posted on 12/20/13 at 8:16 pm to BMoney
I can vouch for the Mammoth, it's a really good stout.
Posted on 12/23/13 at 12:26 am to SouthOfSouth
Santa Clause is bringing me the proper equipment to brew some beer. Is there a website or book any of you would recommend to get me started on the right foot? Is there an "easy" beer to try for my first brew?


Posted on 12/23/13 at 5:33 am to CT
How to brew - John Palmer. I'd start off doing extract brewing. You can buy the kits off austinhomebrew. Good luck it's an addiction!
Posted on 12/23/13 at 9:50 am to CT
quote:
Santa Clause is bringing me the proper equipment to brew some beer. Is there a website or book any of you would recommend to get me started on the right foot? Is there an "easy" beer to try for my first brew?
Go with How to Brew, and brew the first recipe in that book, the Cincinnati Pale Ale. It is a good little pale ale. The book basically starts you out brewing. The first chapter is a step by step guide to brew that beer. The next chapter explains what you just did, and why you did that. It really is a vital book to any beginning homebrewer.
Posted on 12/23/13 at 9:56 am to BugAC
Alot of Oatmeal Stout
Target OG = 1.08
Target FG = 1.023
ABV = 7.5%
IBU = 41
Simple Infusion Mash - 60 minutes
60 minute boil
Grains - 15 lbs
11 lbs Maris Otter (73.3%)
1 lb 6 oz Flaked Oats (9.2%)
12 oz. Rice Hulls (5%)
10 oz. Roasted Barley (4.2%)
6 oz. Chocolate Malt (2.5%)
5 oz. Coffee malt (2.1%)
5 oz. Crystal 75L (2.1%)
4 oz. De-bittered Black Carafa III (1.7%)
Hops
1 oz. East Kent Goldings (60 min)
.75 oz. Millenium (60 min)
Yeast
White Labs WLP004 Irish Ale Yeast
Target OG = 1.08
Target FG = 1.023
ABV = 7.5%
IBU = 41
Simple Infusion Mash - 60 minutes
60 minute boil
Grains - 15 lbs
11 lbs Maris Otter (73.3%)
1 lb 6 oz Flaked Oats (9.2%)
12 oz. Rice Hulls (5%)
10 oz. Roasted Barley (4.2%)
6 oz. Chocolate Malt (2.5%)
5 oz. Coffee malt (2.1%)
5 oz. Crystal 75L (2.1%)
4 oz. De-bittered Black Carafa III (1.7%)
Hops
1 oz. East Kent Goldings (60 min)
.75 oz. Millenium (60 min)
Yeast
White Labs WLP004 Irish Ale Yeast
This post was edited on 12/23/13 at 9:58 am
Posted on 12/26/13 at 7:09 pm to BugAC
Finally getting around to this. No one better use this to enter the LA Homebrew club competition.
Award winning Typhoon Amber:
12.25 2-row
1 Munich
1 crystal 40
.5 crystal 120
.5 victory
3 oz chocolate
1 oz Chinook 60
1 oz Cascade 10
1 oz Amarillo 10
1 o cascade 0 (for 10 mins)
1 oz Amarillo 0 (for 10 mins)
S05 dry yeast at 62 degree
Mash at 152
OG 1061
Award winning Typhoon Amber:
12.25 2-row
1 Munich
1 crystal 40
.5 crystal 120
.5 victory
3 oz chocolate
1 oz Chinook 60
1 oz Cascade 10
1 oz Amarillo 10
1 o cascade 0 (for 10 mins)
1 oz Amarillo 0 (for 10 mins)
S05 dry yeast at 62 degree
Mash at 152
OG 1061
This post was edited on 12/26/13 at 7:10 pm
Posted on 12/27/13 at 8:56 am to Fratastic423
quote:
.5 crystal 120
Never used 120...
quote:
3 oz chocolate
Must come out pretty dark for an amber yes?
Sounds awesome though. Glad you threw one up. As of now Im just entering a Stout so I won't be recipe stealin.

Posted on 12/27/13 at 9:07 am to SouthOfSouth
quote:
Must come out pretty dark for an amber yes?
Not really. I've had it before. It's not even a light brown color.
Posted on 12/27/13 at 9:11 am to s14suspense
quote:
Not really. I've had it before. It's not even a light brown color.
Interesting. Well sounds solid.
Posted on 12/27/13 at 9:16 am to SouthOfSouth
quote:
Interesting. Well sounds solid.
It is very solid. He's really got it fine tuned.
That little bit of dark grain is just meant to tint the beer for the most part.
Posted on 12/27/13 at 8:18 pm to SouthOfSouth
This is an attempt to help new home brewers.
FIRST TRY
I did an American Amber home brew kit for my first brew:
The instructioons that came with the kit were very good.
The following were notes I made that the instructions did not cover.
buy a long stainless steel spoon
buy bottle brush
buy large funnel
buy turkey baster or wine thief
put dry rugs down on tile floors. Area can get slippery.
secondary fermentation is a waste of time.
need about 50 brown and not twist off.
cooling wort before pitching yeast takes a long time.
measure OG before putting in carboy.
yeast is very active the first couple of days
plug and air cap kept getting pushed out of carboy
I drilled larger holes in cap. This seemed to work.
You may want to use a tube and water vessel set up.
Put priming sugar in before bottling. Mix well.
Use priming sugar calculator
Priming sugar calculator
This beer turned out OK but I would not do again. It was a good learner.
SECOND TRY
My second attempt was a partial mash which turned out very good.
This is the recipe I used, kind of like a Blue Moon.
Belgian wit partial mash recipe
It took a long time to cool wort after boil. Put pot in ice water in sink.
Read yeast instructions before starting. Some require 3 hours prep.
Put rags or rubber mat in sink when cooling wort.
I really liked this beer. Family enjoyed also.
THIRD TRY
Working on full grain right now. Will follow this post with more notes if anyone cares.
FIRST TRY
I did an American Amber home brew kit for my first brew:
The instructioons that came with the kit were very good.
The following were notes I made that the instructions did not cover.
buy a long stainless steel spoon
buy bottle brush
buy large funnel
buy turkey baster or wine thief
put dry rugs down on tile floors. Area can get slippery.
secondary fermentation is a waste of time.
need about 50 brown and not twist off.
cooling wort before pitching yeast takes a long time.
measure OG before putting in carboy.
yeast is very active the first couple of days
plug and air cap kept getting pushed out of carboy
I drilled larger holes in cap. This seemed to work.
You may want to use a tube and water vessel set up.
Put priming sugar in before bottling. Mix well.
Use priming sugar calculator
Priming sugar calculator
This beer turned out OK but I would not do again. It was a good learner.
SECOND TRY
My second attempt was a partial mash which turned out very good.
This is the recipe I used, kind of like a Blue Moon.
Belgian wit partial mash recipe
It took a long time to cool wort after boil. Put pot in ice water in sink.
Read yeast instructions before starting. Some require 3 hours prep.
Put rags or rubber mat in sink when cooling wort.
I really liked this beer. Family enjoyed also.
THIRD TRY
Working on full grain right now. Will follow this post with more notes if anyone cares.
Posted on 12/28/13 at 8:06 am to chity
Nice! You mention twice about cooling the wort. Look into buying or DIY'ing a wort chiller.


This post was edited on 12/28/13 at 8:07 am
Posted on 12/28/13 at 10:05 am to LSURoss
quote:
Nice! You mention twice about cooling the wort. Look into buying or DIY'ing a wort chiller.
I started to do this and bought a 20' X 3/8" flexible copper tubing from Home Depot. I would suggest a 1/2" diameter. You do not realize how much heat you have to dispense of. Also, this tubing kinks very easily. The packaged coil diameter was too large for my pot. What I found out through trial and error is that if stepped gently on one end and pulled the coil up vertically to about 3 or 4 feet off the floor, you could slowly tighten the diameter and work the tension down the coil until you reach the desired diameter.
For the 90 degree bend, I used a plumbers tube bender which is just a spring that slips over the tubing. You can slowly get the bend you need. You could possibly heat the tubing with a propane torch and bend it that way.
The connectors, tubing and such are elementary.
Hope this helps.
Posted on 12/30/13 at 8:10 pm to s14suspense
quote:
Grapefruit RyePA (All-Grain)
May use this grain bill as my first BIAB batch. I have an inventory of hops that I will use in substitute of the ones listed here. I really like a good rye IPA

Posted on 12/30/13 at 9:24 pm to LoneStarTiger
There you go. Let me know how it turns out.
Posted on 1/1/14 at 12:55 pm to SouthOfSouth
Snooze Button Breakfast Stout
Extract version, 5 gallon batch
Steeping Grain
1 lb Flaked Oats
12 oz Chocolate Malt
8 oz Black Patent
I wanted to use de-bittered black but they were out, but will probably go with black roasted barley next time
Fermentables
7 lbs Maris Otter LME
1 lb Lactose
Hops
1/2 oz Nugget @ 60
1/2 oz Willamette @ 30
1/2 oz Willamette @ 10
Yeast
1 package WLP002 English Ale
Added 6 oz cacao nibs after fermentation
Added 3 cups cold pressed coffee a day before bottling
According to Beersmith, this should yield the following:
Beer Details:
OG: 1.060
ABV: 5.8%
Color: 36 SRM
IBUS: 36.8
However, I ended up with the following:
OG: 1.054
ABV: 4.3%
Not sure just what happened. I know pre-boil gravity was on the money. I guess it didn't boil off as much as I thought it would. Then it didn't ferment down as low as predicted.
Extract version, 5 gallon batch
Steeping Grain
1 lb Flaked Oats
12 oz Chocolate Malt
8 oz Black Patent
I wanted to use de-bittered black but they were out, but will probably go with black roasted barley next time
Fermentables
7 lbs Maris Otter LME
1 lb Lactose
Hops
1/2 oz Nugget @ 60
1/2 oz Willamette @ 30
1/2 oz Willamette @ 10
Yeast
1 package WLP002 English Ale
Added 6 oz cacao nibs after fermentation
Added 3 cups cold pressed coffee a day before bottling
According to Beersmith, this should yield the following:
Beer Details:
OG: 1.060
ABV: 5.8%
Color: 36 SRM
IBUS: 36.8
However, I ended up with the following:
OG: 1.054
ABV: 4.3%
Not sure just what happened. I know pre-boil gravity was on the money. I guess it didn't boil off as much as I thought it would. Then it didn't ferment down as low as predicted.
This post was edited on 1/1/14 at 1:11 pm
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