Beer Labels

Posted by npaci on May 23rd, 2010 filed in Brewing
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With the sour and big beers that have been coming out of the brewery lately, the need for bottling has returned.  For a long while we have only been kegging beer, as there is no need to age it.  With the return to bottling, the need for labeling has returned.  For all the sour beers, a zombie(undead/infection theme) is driving the names.  At this point I have  a number of labels shown below.

Baltic-Porter

Sickening

Lactobazombius

Oud-Bruin

Doomsday

funky-dark-saison-II

It has been fun watching a consistency in the labels is arise naturally throughout the process of making more and more labels…


Relish 2009

Posted by npaci on May 23rd, 2010 filed in Beer Club
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Vital Statistics:
Head Count: 19
Beer Count: 21
Food Count: 21
Beer Taster Count: 399
Total Entree Plates: 209

TotalF


lights

Inspired by the Beer/Food Pairing movement one of the beer clubs that I frequent NOVA Homebrew decided to put on a similar event with many commonalities and many twists in our own direction.

A couple of months back Aaron suggested something along this line at one of our meetings and as one that enjoys a challenge and a house full of people, I readily volunteered our house.  That set, the event seemed a bit like too big of an idea that had too much potential to flop…but I ignored that.  I figured others saw the vision, i would just trust them til I saw the path to make it work.  Fast forward to 3 weeks before the event, some family friends came over and I decided it was time to start thinking about this whole thing and how it was going to work.

Flight 1

Golden Ale / Mushroom & Cheese Hors D’Oeuvres

Belgian Strong Golden Ale / Beer-Steamed Mussels

Munich Helles / Quiche Lorraine

Berliner Weiss / Raspberry Cheesecake

Flight 2

IPA / Hot & Mild Wings

Scottish Export 80 / Chili

Hefeweizen /  Bananas Foster

Stout(Avery Out of Bounds) / Guinness Chocolate Cake

Flight 3

English Pale Ale / Indian Curry

Black IPA(Yakima Twilight) / Grillades and Grits

Bourbon Stout / Chocolate Cheesecake

Baltic Porter / Chocolate

Flight 4

Porter / Sauerkraut Balls

Flanders Red / Pot Roast

Imperial ESB / Ribs

Old Ale / Goat cheese, walnut and dried apricot

Sweet Mead / Creme Caramel

Flight 5

Wild Ale / Savory Cheesecake

Barleywine / Prosciutto, caramelized shallot & Blue cheese spoon

Stock Ale / Grilled Beef Bite

Creme Brulee Stout(Southern Tier) / Cheesecake

Imperial Stout / Ganache spoon

Dessert Plates: 133

Vital Statistics:
Head Count: 19
Beer Count: 21
Food Count: 21
Beer Taster Count: 399
Total Entree Plates: 209
Total Dessert Plates: 133
The experience was an experience in excess.  Something about 20+  beers with 20+ food accompaniments really made me long for the olden days of socially acceptable bulimia.  There were a number of lessons to be learned from the event, in no particular order:
- Beer is good, food is good, doesn’t always mean that beer & food is good together.
- Coordinating people is tricky, but with the right group of folks, even a bunch of home brewers can be coordinated into a well orchestrated and involved group activity.
- People like doing things, from washing over 400 beer glasses, to frying enough buffalo wings for a small army.
- If given enough food to make yourself want to cry, you will cry.  Especially if you have 4 cheesecakes to work through.
- Strong beer at the end of the night, is a hard sell.  At that point everyone wanted water and a nap.
- If left out, even people who are full, will continue to eat until almost all cheese and crackers are gone.
- 20 is too many items to drink/eat in a single evening.  The number should be closer to 10.
- You can get an awful lot of people in a small space if everyone is cozy.
Next time, less beer, less food, more time!  A hell of a good time, looking forward to doing something like this again, everyone learned a ton about eating to excess as well as pairing food and beer.


Get that beer out of here…

Posted by npaci on October 25th, 2009 filed in Brewing, Time Lapse
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So the first of the barrel beers was ready to come out of the barrel on saturday, so a 8 of us showed up with a rough idea of what we were going to do to get the beer out of the barrel and into bottles and carboy’s and home with it’s respective parties.  During the process of the barrel emptying we put the time lapse camera on the barrel’s.  Next time we will do the bottling session upstairs, where there were 6 of us working at the same time.  In the end we bottled 16 cases of beer and sent home 16 gallons in bulk vessels(4 gallons in a carboy with sour cherries), four gallons a keg, and 8 more gallons in two buckets for bottling by the one member of the barrel cabal who has moved on to the west coast.

The beer, a flanders red(back story thanks to mad fermentationist) has a lovely sourness, and tastes better than any commercial sour beer I have had in a while.  Just waiting for bubbles now…


Pellicle formation with Peg vs. Airlock

Posted by npaci on October 3rd, 2009 filed in Brewing
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Back in may I got a healthy 2nd generation rosalaire yeast slurry from my barrel brewing buddy Zach. The slurry damn near filled up a two liter soda bottle, and feeling adventurus, i whipped up a 10 gallon Oud Bruin based off of JZ’s recipie in Brewing Classic Styles…a month later I racked it off the yeast(well probably mostly bacteria) cake and got it into secondary.  The slurry went in the fridge only to be neglected until mid september only to go to yet another barrel brew brother where it seems to have found it’s feet again and ferments madly away in the 80’s on some other flanders esque style beer…

Any way that’s not the point, the point is one of if the wooden peg is worth doing.  The thinking behind the wooden peg is that in the context of ration’s the surface area of a simple wooden peg in the opening of the carboy, is roughly equivalent to the surface/volume ration of a full size wine or bourbon barrel.  But all of that is debatable without an actual experiment…so here we find ourselves in the asle of home depot looking at oak stair balusters….”one or two?”  Well in the name of all things science, we hold off and only buy one, which we then chop down to the right length to dip into the beer, and not stick out of the top of the carboy…initially there was no difference, they both did nothing, but right around a month or so after racking, there started to be the little white pools on the surface of the beer.  Then as with all good flanders beers, I forgot about it, not on purpose, just went off and forgot about it properly.  During this forgotten time, it was summer(albeit a mild one) in dc, we didn’t run the AC much and it was in a cool dark room.  Probably saw low 80’s but mostly mid-70’s due to the nice tile floor in the room it lives in.

When I came back to it, you can see the dramatically different pellicle thicknesses, neither beer looks ropey in any way, just a nice hard looking pellicle.  I haven’t tasted either version yet(will do that tomorrow when Alex and I are brewing the beer(a sour belgian single) to replace the flanders red that is ready to come out of the barrel).

In any event, it is interesting to see the difference AND it will be yet another aspect of the oud bruin, cause now I will be blending back the two versions to get the sourness/funkiness to a desired point….another flavor control lever if you will.

Pictures tell it all…

Edit: Thanks to Michael Tonsmeire for part of the inspiration to do half the batch with the peg vs. the other half with the traditional air lock.


Wooden Peg generating a more significant pellicle than a traditional airlock

Wooden Peg generating a more significant pellicle than a traditional airlock

Traditional Airlock NOT generating the same degree of pellicle

Traditional Airlock NOT generating the same degree of pellicle


10 gallons of Wee Heavy in under a minute…

Posted by npaci on February 9th, 2009 filed in Brewing, Time Lapse
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A little time lapse of a day at the redcar brewery…

 


Innagural Beer Club Night (*Updated!!)

Posted by npaci on June 12th, 2008 filed in Beer Club, Brewing, Time Lapse
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First Night of beer club…start at 7:30(at least noah started around 7-7:15, folks started showing up around 8).

Beer of the evening is a Boddingtons Bitter.  This activity on a school night…not sure about it..ended up being a really late night.

Notes about the brew night: had a kink in the herms return hose, undershot the wort volumes by 1 gallon or so, had to use all the trub to get even within 1/2 gallon of the final 10 gallon full volume.

Beer after 12 hours…
The yeast after 12 hours in the carboy.



Hog Heaven Clone Take II

Posted by npaci on May 25th, 2008 filed in Brewing, Time Lapse, Uncategorized
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Hog Heaven Clone Attempt #1(time slightly accelerated)

Posted by admin on May 14th, 2008 filed in Brewing, Time Lapse, Uncategorized
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