Mostly, I have been brewing....
Since I last posted anything of significance I've brewed seven different all-grain batches of beer. Some of them have been merely OK, some have been good and a couple have been absolutely amazing!
As a quick catch-up, here are the batches I've brewed but not posted about:
- 4BC Altbier v3.1. An all-grain attempt at a Dusseldorf Altbier using liquid yeast (Wyeast 1007 German Ale). Just a few bottles of this beer remain. I was very happy with it. Slightly on the pale side for style but a nice clean malty taste. I'll brew this one again.
- Palliser Special. An English Best/Special bitter. Again, just a few bottles of this remaining in the beer fridge. Very pleased with this one also - nice level of bitterness and the dry-hopping (added hops into the secondary fermenter) with NZ-grown Styrian Goldings hops worked well. Lots of hop aroma.
- Saison Du Diable. Possibly the favourite beer I've brewed so far. Recipe was based on Jamil Zainasheff's award-winning recipe. Yeast used was a Wyeast special edition - 3711PC French Saison. I fermented it at ambient temperatures in my shed (which were around 20-22 degrees in a warm Auckland spring) then ramped it up to 28 degrees by bringing it into the conservatory and turning the heating on for the last few days. This resulted in it fermenting out very dry, which was the objective. It's a lovely pale golden beer with tons of funky aroma, lots of fruit but a clean dry finish. Very chuffed with this one.
- Oh Vienna! A Vienna lager. Had some problems with this one - the liquid yeast (Wyeast 2206 Bavarian Lager) failed to kick off. I left it for a few days and tried raising the temperature but no joy. So I pitched a rehydrated sachet of Saflager S-23 and this kicked fermentation into life. However, I have no ide4a what the interaction of the two yeasts would do. This was the first beer to go into my new kegging setup (of which more later) and was the first beer I inflicted on my fellow SOBA brewers when they came round to my place, but I wasn't all that happy with it. A distinct rubbery/sulphury aroma, persisting into the flavour. A lack of malt sweetness also. I'll give it a few weeks in the keg and see if it comes right.
- Pale Beauty. A beer which is difficult to pigenhole to a BJCP style. In theory it's an English IPA but it tastes unlike most IPAs I've ever drunk! Not that it's a bad thing - I think I've created a damn fine beer. It reminds me a lot of Daisy Cutter from Twickenham Fine Ales, one of my favourite UK beers. It shares a name with another Twickenham beer, although it doesn't taste like Twickenham's Pale Beauty. As it's name suggests it's a pale straw colour and has a big hit of hops on the nose. There's a pronounced passionfruit aroma from the Riwaka hops and a lovely creaminess. At 5.7% it's a little strong to quaff, but it's very tempting to do so!
- Palliser Pride. My attempt to get close to one of my favourite beers of all time, Fuller's London Pride. I used Wyeast 1968 London ESB yeast which is rumoured to be the same strain as the Fuller's house yeast. The beer has turned out very nice, though perhaps closer to Fuller's Chiswick Bitter than London Pride - lacking a litle richness and body, perhaps. It's a mighty fine beer for quaffing though, and is currently on tap in my beer fridge!
- Grandad Joe's Gold Label. This is my currently-fermenting brew. Named in honour of my grandfather who, in his last weeks, took a liking to Whitbread Gold Label. It's not an attempt to recreate that beer, just an attempt to brew a good English barley wine. There's a lot of Pale Ale malt in it, and not a lot else ( a hint of crystal malt and a bit of sugar to stop it being too cloying). If all comes out well it will be somewhere between 10%-11% and will be aged for at least 6 months.
Labels: homebrew




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