Sunday, January 18, 2009

Brew Day - Electric Landlord

An exciting brew day for me yesterday, and one that went fairly smoothly. The beer I brewed takes its name from this blog, but its heritage comes from one of the greatest English beers.

One of my favourite English beers of all time is Landlord, from Timothy Taylor's brewery in Keighley, West Yorkshire. It's a perfect example of an English Pale Ale - golden in colour with a strong smooth backbone of bitterness. I always used to detect a creaminess in there plus a hint of bitter orange marmalade. Overall the keyword would be 'balance' - the malt, the hops and the yeast character all coming together well.

The beer I brewed yesterday was not an attempt to clone Landlord, although that beer was certainly my inspiration. The exact recipe for Landlord is not public knowledge, but Roger Protz's Real Ale Almanac indicates that it uses 100% Golden Promise malt, plus Fuggles and 3 varieties of Goldings hops. Of these, the Styrian Goldings lend it that bitter orange character.

I have been reading quite a lot about SMaSH brewing, which stands for Single Malt and Single Hop i.e. brewing a beer using only a single malt variety and a single hop variety. I thought that this beer would be a good place to experiment with this. So the recipe brewed yesterday was:
3.9kg Golden Promise malt
25g NZ Styrian Goldings @ 60 mins
20g NZ Styrian Goldings @ 30 mins
20g NZ Styrian Goldings @ 15 mins
20g NZ Styrian Goldings @ 0 mins

Original Gravity was 1.042 for 21.5 litres, bitterness should be 36 IBUs.

The yeast I used was a limited edition from Wyeast, which I bought from Craftbrewer in Australia. It's 1469PC West Yorkshire Ale, and the rumours are that it could actually be the Timothy Taylor's house yeast. So I've got a pretty good chance of getting very close to the characteristics of Landlord. But as long as I produce a flavoursome beer I'll be happy.

As I write this the fermenter is bubbling away nicely in my temperature-controlled fridge at 20 degrees Centigrade. I'll leave it there for about a week before transferring it to a secondary fermenter and dry-hopping with more Styrian Goldings. All being well it should be in a keg in a couple of weeks time.

I also had an excellent package arrive yesterday from The Brewing Network in the USA. It was a late Christmas present to myself - a signed copy of Brewing Classic Styles by homebrewing legends Jamil Zainasheff and John Palmer, plus a Brew Strong t-shirt from their fascinating podcast. Loads more recipes to brew, and a cool t-shirt to wear while brewing them!

3 Comments:

At 3:59 AM, Blogger Fiascowines said...

Nice blog Martin. Good to see kiwis with brewing interests chipping away. Keep it up mate..good content.

Cheers Aaron

 
At 12:26 PM, Blogger Blog Woggle said...

Martin - until I'd read this I'd never heard of 'sparge water'! I shall await with interest the progress of the latest batch! David

 
At 12:29 AM, Blogger Kieran Haslett-Moore said...

I use NZ Styrians a fair bit, the only thing I would say about using them on their own is the dreaded NZ Hop trait of grassyness comes out. I blend English hops with them which seems to suppress the grassy character. All your additions are pretty small however so hopefully all will be well.

 

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