Sunday, August 30, 2009

Charcoal grill brick oven

Our grill for the brick pizza oven found us in the trash today. It's in great shape and is just begging for an increase in thermal mass. CP is working on the simulations. Construction will likely begin this week.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Bottled the Wedding

We bottled two batches today, so I'm down to three more batches to deal with. There's a Belgian strong dark aging in my office, an Apple Brandy Barrel Brew aging in Lansdale, and a saison that needs to be racked in Lansdale. I have hops planted in Williamstown and Maple Shade, too! Forgive my lack of details, but I'll get the malt and grain bills up soon.

The first, "Ball and Chain" is an aptly named beer we originally thought we were going to serve at the wedding, but we ultimately decided that transporting homebrew and having enough time for it to settle and clear would have been a problem. It's a basic pale and crystal base, with some fun going on with the hops; I'll update with the hopping bill later.

The second, "Whatever, I'm Pumping," is a British best bitter, and is an experiment with a dry English ale yeast. There was a mild medicinal note, but I'm not sure if that was from the yeast or not and I bottled it directly from the primary.

T-minus one week!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Oude Geuze Boon Mariage Parfait

It's been a while since the last post, but, alas, these are the consequences of the first year of classes. Things should slow down just a little bit until the fall.

I tried a bottle of geuze I picked up in New Jersey the other week. A geuze is essentially a blend of a lambics, each of different ages. Reading some of the descriptions on Beer Advocate such as "great funky horseblanket/Camambert aromas" can certainly turn a stomach as well as evoke sensations of a compost heap and cooked broccoli, but hell, let's give it a shot.

The color was coppery, with a light shade of orange an just a touch of a cardboard box brown. Its nose was sour, with cheesy, organic, and funky Brett notes. It acquired a more citrus, lemon-zesty quality as it warmed. I'd say the beer was best probably slightly chilled, but not too cold to mask any of the flavors. The palate was light, with a nice sour note, thought not as face-puckering as some other lambics I've tried. Again, some hints of a lemon or lime, negligible to non-existent bitterness, with just some slight hints of malt to remind you that there's actually barley somewhere in the process. Nothing too funky going on in general, though it certainly takes a few tries to not be put off by the flavor of these beers.

This beer is 100% spontaneously fermented, meaning they open the fermenting vessels and hope for the best. I don't think I could get away with this in my dusty, Kitty hair laden basement, though it may be fun to brew one of these this summer, dropping in the dregs of some funky beers over the course of six to eight months and see what happens.

Friday, February 20, 2009

We miss the D's

We miss the D's.

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Anchor Brewery Old Foghorn

Oh, what to say about this beer! Bright cherry and copper color. A surprisingly subtle nose given the hopping and gravity rates, but velvety rich with a solid citrus and earty hop (Northern Brewer?) base. Nose also contains hints of dried, dark fruit and fig. Beautiful. The beer itself is full-bodied, with a solid pale malt base. Minute hints of chocolate or toffee, maybe? Deep, almost achey bitterness, like the hops had much, much more to say when the beer was younger but have since settled down. Jason says that they do a wonderful job aging the beer sufficiently before shipping out.

I guess I have to make one of these now, too.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

The Brewer's Art Green Peppercorn Tripel

What a nice beer. Standard golden straw color (what a common descriptor this is becoming) with a pretty white, foamy head. Carbonation seems appropriate: lively but not too much. The nose is full, with notes of yeast, malt, and indeed a spicy, almost pepper-like quality. It also resembles many of the other Brewer's Art noses, most notably Ozzy (their Golden Strong Duvel interpretation) and more so Cerberus (their gorgeous tripel). The beer itself is malty and full bodied, finishing rather dry, with that characteristic BA bitterness (lots of Saaz or Hallertauer? Or is it English?). A little extra hop never hurt. Again, there's a lot of similarity of Cerberus, but with a bit of an extra spicy edge. Overall, a fantastic beer; I'd love to try and clone this someday.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Stone Smoked Porter

AMH and I are tasting a Smoked Porter from the Stone Brewing Co. from CA. Near-black in the center, red/brown at the edges. The smokiness is pretty subtle in the nose, but certainly evokes notions of grilled meat. There's also a sweetness that I can't quite describe; it smells dark, chocolatey, and malty, all wonderfully subtle and melded. Mouthfeel is on the fat side, but not so much. Think a mash of around 154-156 deg F. Has a solid malt and hop backbone without being too big, with hints of bacon (!), chocolate, and a layer of something burnt, almost like burnt cherries or something. Overall, a satisfying beer.

I have a couple pounds of smoked malt lying around. Jason and I contemplated a smoked pale ale once upon a time. How does one hop appropriately to complement the gentle smokiness?

Also, first wedding beer is brewing as we speak! A relatively basic pale ale, lot's of pale malt with a shot of some medium crystal. First wort hopped with some oldish Crystal hops, bittered with Simcoe, and slammed with Cascade near the end. Should be a solid pale ale.