Friday, 18 June 2021

Pirate Life - South Coast Pale Ale - Beer Review

Brewed By: Pirate Life
Beer: Eazy Hazy
ABV: 4.4%
Malts: Pale, Wheat, Oats, Carapils
Hops: Cashmere, Wai-iti, Taiheke
IBU: Unknown

Pirate Life South Coast Pale Ale can


"This landmark pale encompasses our founding vision of ingenuity, our unwavering commitment to quality and the laid-back spirit of the South Coast - or as we Pirates prefer to call it, home.

It pours a luminous yellow, with a fluffy head of foam. Expect aromas of citrus and peach. On the palate, tropical fruits pair with sweet malt and a fine hop bitterness. It’s light-bodied, crisp and highly crushable."

Review

I first tried this beer on tap at a pub I visited a few weeks ago. It left a lasting impression after a couple of schooners, so when I saw it on special at the local bottle shop I didn't hesitate to grab a couple of 4-packs.

I've had other Pirate Life beers before, and have always found them to be pretty damn good - and this one is no exception. As claimed by Pirate Life above, it's a very lightly coloured, and light bodied beer with minimal bitterness and plenty of hop-forward flavour.

A very easy drinking and as Pirate Life put it, "crushable" beer - would definitely buy some more of these again!


Rating

8/10



Friday, 4 June 2021

Lallemand New England - American East Coast Ale Yeast

The latest recipe pack I purchased included the Lallemand New England - American East Coast Ale yeast - and I noticed a few things about this yeast that were interesting so I thought I'd create a post to point them out and outline my experience with this yeast.

Lallemand New England American East Coast Ale Yeast - 11g Packet

Lag Time

Lallemand's website claims that the lag phase for this yeast "..can be longer when compared to other strains, ranging from 24-36 hours." Lag time refers to the time from pitching your yeast, till when you see signs of active fermentation. Too little lag time (ie. fermentation begins too quickly) can be problematic and lead to incomplete fermentations, or off flavours being developed. And too long a lag time can also be problematic is it gives bacteria and wild yeast the opportunity to infect your wort. A generally accepted target for lag time is approximately 12 hours.

So, 24-36 hours is therefore 2-3 times longer than what we're ideally aiming for. On my first attempt of using this yeast I saw a lag time of over 48 hours before seeing signs of active fermentation. There was another factor at play in my case though which was a low wort temperature. I pitched the yeast at around 21 degrees celsius, and over the next 36 hours the temperature dropped to 15.4 degrees celsius - awfully close to the lower part of the range Lallemand specify on their website. This temp drop was caused by the cold ambient temperature where I live (even though I had the fermenter insulated and in a dedicated brew fridge that was switched off).

But as the old saying goes, "relax, don't worry, have a home brew" (RDWHAHB) - and after 48 hours I was very relieved to see fermentation underway. I was certainly starting to get nervous and working out what my contingency plan was, although luckily I didn't need it in the end.

So if you're using this yeast, be prepared for a longer than usual wait time, especially if your wort temperature is at the lower end of the acceptable range.

Pitching Rate

You probably can't read it in the image at the top of this post, but the pack the yeast comes in recommends a pitching rate of 1.0g/L. Most standard homebrew batches are 23-25L so this would require at least 2 packets to satisfy this criteria.

I only realised this directive after already pitching the yeast (and trying to figure out why the lag time was so long - as per the section above). I put a post out on some home brewing social media pages I'm a member of asking for other peoples experience or feedback with using this yeast. The responses were mixed - some suggest they always pitch multiple packets, others say that if the OG of your wort isn't too high (ie. less than 1.050) then a single packet should suffice.

For my first brew with this yeast, the OG was 1.049 and it took over 48 hours to really get going - as I described in the above section.

I'll report back with the results of this beer/fermentation after pitching a single pack of this yeast.

Thursday, 3 June 2021

Juice Bomb Hazy IPA - BrewZilla Brew Day

Brewing the Cheeky Peak Juice Bomb Hazy IPA marks a number of firsts in my brewing journey. This is the first brew where I'll be making adjustments to water (using brewing salts such as calcium sulphate, magnesium sulphate and calcium chloride). It's also the first brew where I'll be adding whirlpool hops - also known as a hop stand. I'm also deciding to not use the top screen to allow me to easily stir the grain during the mash to try and improve efficiency, and it's also my first time using Lallemand New England East Coast yeast. Here's how it all went.

Water Adjustments

Setting up for brew day - I've got my mash water in the Brewzilla heating up in the garage - and my sparge water in a separate pot on the stove, also heating up to the target sparge temperature of 75C. First thing to do is open my packets of brewing salts and measure the recommended amounts for the mash and sparge water and add them in. The set of eBay scientific scales that measure 0.01g seemed to do the trick, although I must admit I haven't tested them with an exact known weight to confirm their accuracy. 

For my first attempt at adjusting water, I'm keeping it simple and only using 3 ingredients - calcium sulphate, magnesium sulphate and calcium chloride. Super easy to do after entering all the values from my water report in the Brewfather app!

I also added half a camden tablet to the mash water and half a tablet to the sparge water to remove chlorine/chloramines from the water.

First step - water adjustments

Mashing In

Total grain bill is just over 5.5kg including 1.6kg of wheat and oats. Definitely one of the best parts of any brew day is the smell when adding the grains and this was no exception. Amazing. Seemed to take an eternity to add all the grain - having a second person to stir while slowly pouring the grain in makes it so much easier though. Once all the grain is added, give it a good stir to make sure there's no dough balls then let it rest for 10 minutes or so to settle before starting the pump to recirculate.

Stirring the mash

The design of the Brewzilla means that there is a significant discrepancy between the temperature that is displayed on the unit and the actual temperature of the mash. I use a digital thermometer in the top of the mash to measure the temperature and then adjust the Brewzilla accordingly. For this brew, my Brewzilla temp was set at 73C in order to hit my mash temperature of 66C - well - within half a degree at least.

Brewzilla set to 73C

Mash is close to target temp of 66C when measured at the top with Brewzilla set to 73C


After the 10 minute rest, fire up the pump and get that mash recirculating. Adjust the flow speed in order to try and maintain a steady water level in relation to the overflow pipe. I stopped the pump a couple of times through the mash to give the grain a good stir. I also decided to try not using the top screen for this brew in order to make this process quicker/easier - removing the top screen to stir the mash would otherwise be tricky - didn't fancy sticking my hands in 65C water to fish it out!

Recirculating the mash

Sparging

After the 60 minute mash had completed, the malt pipe was lifted and sparge water was added. With all the wheat and oats in the grain I was a little nervous about a stuck sparge, but thankfully the water drained and flowed through without any problems at all. Took about 10 minutes in total, and the estimated sparge water volume from Brewfather was pretty much spot on. Got my 30L pre-boil volume so now we're ready to ramp up to a boil.

The Boil

I always set the temperature to HH as soon as I lift out the malt pipe for sparging in order to get a head start on ramping up to boil temperature. For whatever reason it seemed to take longer than usual to reach a boil - perhaps the cooler ambient temperature outside. 

Another thing I like to do while waiting to reach boiling temperature is run the recirculation arm through the hop spider. This helps to filter out any grain that escaped the malt pipe during the mash.


Pro tip - run the recirculation arm through the hop spider to filter out any grain while waiting to reach boiling temperature

We eventually reached a nice rolling boil and some constant stirring for the first few minutes to avoid the dreaded boilover and dreaded cleanup associated with it. This recipe only calls for a 60 minute hop addition which was added to the hop spider.

With 10 minutes left in the boil the provided yeast nutrient was added, and then with 5 minutes left the whirlpool arm attachment was added as well as the immersion chiller to give them a few minutes in the boil to sterilise them.

Whirlpool/Hop Stand

This was my first attempt at adding whirlpool hops - also known as a hop stand. For those who aren't familiar this involves dropping the temperature of the wort after the boil to 80C and then adding hops for flavour/aroma and letting them steep at this temperature for 20 minutes. The idea being that the lower temperature minimises the bitterness extracted from the hops, but still releases a lot of the flavour and aroma from the hops.

At the end of the boil I shut off the heating elements on the Brewzilla and then began running water through the immersion chiller. I had my trusty thermometer measuring the temperature of the wort, and within a minute or two the temperature had already dropped from 100 to just over 80 degrees. At this point I shutoff the water flowing through the chiller, however the temperature kept dropping. It went as low as 73C - not a complete disaster but certainly lower than my target of 80. I adjusted the temperature of the Brewzilla and switched the large heating element back on. Added the whirlpool hops anyway and switched on the pump with the whirlpool arm attached. 

Brewzilla with whirlpool arm and immersion chiller

Took about 5-10 minutes before the target temperature of 80C was reached again - so I'll remember next time to switch off the water through the immersion chiller as soon as the temperature drops below 90.

Chilling and Transfer

Once the whirlpool/hop stand was completed, I turned on the water through the immersion chiller again to get the wort temperature down to pitching/transfer temperature. It was a cold morning so I think the colder temperature of the tap water helped to cool it down faster than on previous brews which was nice. I wait until the temperature on the Brewzilla reads 28C before transferring to the fermenter.

Holding the transfer hose high above the fermenter to promote splashing and oxygenation of the wort prior to pitching yeast

As depicted in the picture above, when transferring from the Brewzilla to the fermenter (Fermzilla), I like to hold the hose high above the opening of the fermenter to allow the wort to fall in and cause splashing to help promote oxygen intake of the wort.

And now for the original gravity (OG) reading - the recipe was expecting an OG of 1.053 - actually managed to get 1.049 so still a few points what was expected, but I try not to worry too much about not hitting all my numbers. Even with this OG it will still be a 5% beer with plenty of body and flavour.

OG reading of 1.049 - a few points below target

Pitching Yeast

This is my first batch using Lallemand's New England East Coast Ale yeast strain. I've never had an issue with simply sprinkling dry yeast over the top of the wort and leaving it to do it's thing so that's exactly what I did with this batch


Lallemand New England East Coast Ale dry yeast sprinkled over the wort

Yeast pitched and the fermenter is in the dedicated brew fridge with inkbird controller attached - and now the waiting game begins!

After 48 hours I still hadn't seen any signs of fermentation starting - except for a few very small bubbles on the surface of the wort. The Lallemand website states that this yeast is known as a slow starter and delays of 24-36 hours are normal/expected. I think another part of my problem was the temperature had dropped from my pitching temperature of 21 degrees, down to about 15.4 - right at the lower range of the recommended temperature for the yeast which could also increase the lag time. I had the fermenter in my dedicated brew fridge (switched off), but the cold winter nights were obviously having an impact. So I moved the fermenter inside to warm it up a bit for a few hours - and was happy to see some solid signs of fermentation the next morning - what a relief!

Some healthy signs of fermentation ~72 hours after pitching yeast



4 days after pitching yeast there was a healthy krausen and plenty of activity - and the temperature has been steadily rising from 16 up to 18 degrees.

Dry Hopping

Dry hopping in the Fermzilla is still an art I'm yet to perfect. One of the draw backs of fermenting under pressure, is that the pressure needs to be released from the fermenter before it can be opened (at least with the all-rounder model that I have). The problem with this is that when the pressure is released, it can cause the krausen to rapidly expand - which is what happened to me, during both dry hops with this beer.

The first dry hop at high krausen wasn't so bad, and I managed to vent all the pressure from the fermenter without any krausen spilling out the lid.

The second dry hop, after fermentation had finished, was different, and I ended up with a 'krausen overflow' after the pressure release (even after releasing the pressure slowly). 

I'll be trying different methods on future brews to try and find a more reliable method of dry hopping and releasing the pressure without causing issues such as this in the future.

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Monday, 31 May 2021

Juice Bomb Hazy IPA - Recipe & Review

All Grain Homebrew Recipe

Thanks to Cheeky Peak Brewery for the recipe and ingredients.

Date: 30/5/2021

Batch Number: 14

Batch Volume: 25L

Fermentables
  • 2-Row Pale Malt - 4kg
  • Flaked Oats - 0.8kg
  • Malted Wheat - 0.8kg
Mash: 66c (60 mins)

Original Gravity (OG): 1.053
Final Gravity (FG): 1.012

Hop Schedule
  • 10g Columbus/Tomahawk - 60 mins - 16.3% (16.3 IBU)
  • 15g Amarillo - 7.8% - 80C Hopstand 20 mins (1.6 IBU)
  • 15g Galaxy - 12.3% - 80C Hopstand 20 mins (2.5 IBU)
  • 15g Mosaic - 11.3% - 80C Hopstand 20 mins (2.3 IBU)
  • 50g Amarillo - 7.8% - Dry Hop High Krausen
  • 50g Galaxy - 12.3% - Dry Hop High Krausen
  • 50g Mosaic - 11.3% - Dry Hop High Krausen
  • 50g Amarillo - 7.8% - Final Gravity
  • 50g Galaxy - 12.3% - Final Gravity
  • 50g Mosaic - 11.3% - Final Gravity

Yeast: Lallemand New England East Coast Ale

Mash Water: 23.55L
Sparge Water: 9.81L

Recipe Review

This beer is amazing - and is definitely my best all-grain brew to date. Thankfully my brews (in my opinion at least) have been trending upwards and getting better with each batch. I'm pretty certain the biggest difference with this batch was the adjustments I made to my water chemistry - which really helped to bring out the hop flavours.

The oats and wheat specialty malts gives the beer and nice, bright and light colour, with a slight amount of haze (which could also be from all the hops, or chill haze, or both) - it may clear over time, but for now it's definitely present. Taste wise it has a nice subtle and velvety mouth feel.

The Juice Bomb Hazy IPA in the glass

The combination of hops is also excellent and makes for a nice, fruity and juicy taste. Mosaic, amarillo and galaxy hops are popular hop varieties that work well together and complement each other nicely.

Although I have an unwritten rule about never brewing the same beer twice, this one is definitely making me reconsider - I don't think it will last long in the keg!

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Tuesday, 25 May 2021

Converting Water Alkalinity - HCO3 to CaCO3

When diving into the world of water chemistry, one thing that we've come across is a couple of different units of measurement for water alkalinity. It's important that you are measuring water alkalinity with the correct unit of measurement to ensure adjustments you make to your water profile are calculated correctly.

Wednesday, 19 May 2021

Balter - Eazy Hazy - Beer Review

Brewed By: Balter
Beer: Eazy Hazy
ABV: 4.0%
Malts: Pale, Wheat
Hops: Unknown
IBU: Unknown


"Why use a stick of dynamite when a party popper will do the trick? Eazy Hazy brings the colour and spark while keeping things nicely chilled. Succulent US hops deliver lime, passionfruit and hints of coconut around a creamy, rolled-wheat base to balance the zesty bitter finish. Pull the ripcord on one without strain or stress. Your well-contained taste explosion."

Balter Eazy Hazy 375ml can


Review

The Balter XPA I consider to be one of my all time favourite beers - so I was excited to try the Eazy Hazy to see how it compares - and it doesn't disappoint. This beer is great. As the name suggests, there's a real haze to which reminded me of Stone & Wood's Pacific Ale. The bitterness is perfectly balanced with the tropical fruit punch taste that hits with each sip. For me, mango was the prevalent flavour - I wasn't detecting any of the lime and coconut that Balter themselves mention though? In any case, the hop combination used to achieve this flavour is excellent.

At 4% ABV, this beer is very sessionable but it unfortunately comes in a pack of 4 so some restraint was required not to polish them all off in one sitting. This is perhaps one of the best things about this particular beer - it's got all the flavour without all the alcohol - which Balter refer to in their opening line above - using a stick of dynamite when a party popper will do the trick.

Plenty of haze visible in the Eazy Hazy


I'm not able to tell for sure if the Eazy Hazy is a permanent fixture on the Balter beer list - but I sure hope it is. It's perhaps taken the place of their XPA at the top of my all time favourite beer list.

A shame Balter don't include as much information as other beer brewing companies regarding of what hops and malts are used to create their beers - would definitely be one worth trying to replicate in a future brew.

Rating

9.5/10


Friday, 14 May 2021

Stockade Brew Co - Mr Fruju NEIPA - Beer Review

Brewed By: Stockade Brew Co
Beer: Mr Fruju New England IPA (NEIPA)
ABV: 6.0%
Malts: Pale, Oats, Unmalted Wheat
Hops: Mosiac, Galaxy, Citra, Ella, Amarillo
IBU: 40


Mr Fruju by Stockade Brew Co

"Meet Mr Fruju, a hazy, tropical mash that's the perfect balance of bitter and juicy"

Review

I've read a lot about New England IPA's (NEIPA's), and am planning on eventually brewing one myself. I haven't taken the plunge yet though as I'm anticipating it will be expensive to make because of the enormous amount of  hops that are required to get the desired flavour - so I want to make sure I've got all my processes well defined and established before giving it a go.

This is my first NEIPA so I was very excited to give it a try and share my thoughts on it.

For those that aren't familiar - the most common term thrown around when talking about NEIPA's is "juicy". They're often hazy in apperance, once again, because of all the hop acids and oils that are present to give the desired flavour.

Enter Mr Fruju - a full strength NEIPA made by Stockade Brew Co. It certainly meets the expected criteria for such a beer. Lots of alcohol. Check. Hazy appearance. Check. Little to no residual bitterness. Check. Tastes like drinking fruit juice? Check. Name most likely abbreviated from "Fruit Juice"? Check.

The information on the official website for this beer claims it has 40 IBU's - which would lead to a relatively bitter initial taste in most styles of beers - but not in this case. I must admit I struggled to taste any bitterness when enjoying this beer which once again demonstrates how much flavour and aroma hops must have been added to absolutely overpower the bitterness.

The brewers notes mentions that no hops were added during the boil (I'm assuming bittering hops would have been added though, but perhaps not?) - and instead all hops were added after the boil during the 'whirlpool' phase to get the highest concentration possible. The brew was then double dry hopped during fermentation.

The combination of five different hops leads to a very tropical taste on the tongue - with predominantly citrus and particularly orange flavours shining through. This tropical taste lingers in the mouth after each sip leaving you wanting more - unlike traditional IPA's that in my experience tend to leave a lingering bitterness in the mouth. Wanting more can be problematic though because at 6% ABV it packs quite a punch.

Haziness is prevalent in the Mr Fruju NEIPA


A thoroughly enjoyable beer with plenty of enjoyable tropical fruit flavours. Little to no perceived bitterness it certainly meets the expected taste of "juicy". A very good introduction into the relatively new style of NEIPA's - would highly recommend.

Rating

8/10

What do you think of the Mr Fruju NEIPA, or NEIPA's in general? Leave a comment below and let me know!


Wednesday, 5 May 2021

Brick Lane - Supernova IPA - Beer Review



Brewed By: Brick Lane Brewing
Beer: Supernova IPA
ABV: 6.8%
Malts: Pale, Munich, Rolled Oats
Hops: Citra, Equanot, Centennial, Mosaic
Yeast: Chico

"Our Supernova IPA is a bright, tropical IPA with notes of tangerine, mango, lychee, pine and green pepper. A champagne supernova of flavours that hits the palate with a powerful aromatic punch"

Review

The Brick Lane Supernova IPA is the quintessential example of what an IPA should be. High alcohol content, a strong bitterness sitting subtly behind a nice strong blend of fruity hops making for an excellent and well balanced combination of flavours.

The malt backbone consists of a mixture of pale, munich and rolled oats which gives it a fairly light colour - with a slight amount of haze - most likely from the large amount of hops that are present. But the malts are only there to play a supporting role to what is the star of the show here - the hops.

Hops are a mixture of citra, equanot, centennial and mosaic - and there's plenty of them. The best way to describe the taste is tropical - not quite at the "juicy" level as say, a New England IPA, but not far off it. The bitterness does linger a little after each sip - more so than the tropical notes which doesn't always leave the most pleasant aftertaste in the mouth.

At 6.8% it packs plenty of punch - I wouldn't be drinking more than 1 or 2 at a time, but this is really what an IPA should be. A well rounded beer with plenty of everything - alcohol, bitterness and hop fruitiness.


Rating

7/10


Saturday, 1 May 2021

Aussie Pale Ale Recipe & Review

All Grain Homebrew Recipe

Thanks to Cheeky Peak Brewery for the recipe and ingredients

Date: 11/4/21

Batch Number: 13

Batch Volume: 25L

Fermentables
  • 2-Row Pale Malt: 4.4kg
  • Wheat Malt: 0.3kg
  • Crystal 10L: 0.2kg

Mash: 65c (60 mins)
Sparge: 76c

Pre-Boil Gravity: 1.045
Original Gravity: 1.008

Hop Schedule
  • 10g Super Pride (14.3%) - 60 mins
  • 25g Galaxy (12.3%) - 0 mins (flameout)
  • 25g Vic Secret (14%) - 0 mins (flameout)
  • 25g Galaxy (12.3%) - Dry Hop 3 days
  • 24g Vic Secret (14%) - Dry Hop 3 days

Yeast: US05

Mash Water: 21.45L
Sparge Water: 11.35L

Recipe Notes

This is our first batch to be fermented in our recently purchased Fermzilla All Rounder 30L. Actual OG was 1.042 - still a few points off the target/expected but getting better efficiency with each brew. Tastes great and first brew out of my new keg so hoping it will keep better than previous brews in bottles.

Aussie Pale Ale in the glass

Tasting Notes/Review

As mentioned above, this is the first beer that I fermented in my new Fermzilla All Rounder fermenter, and the first beer I've put into a keg instead of bottling. For me, this has made all the difference in maintaining a consistently good flavour in my beer when compared to my old process of bottling. The flavour of this beer is great - very easy drinking and not especially overpowering at only 4.5% ABV. 

The crystal malt gives it a somewhat dark and browny colour compared to other pale ales - but the mixture of different malts gives it a nice subtle balance which you'd typically expect from a pale ale like this. The level of bitterness is well matched with the amount of dry hops giving it a somewhat fruity flavour without being overwhelming or overpowering. A great baseline to use for creating other recipes - keep the quantities of ingredients but just change them out - perhaps some munich instead of crystal next time? Or perhaps some centennial and cascade hops instead?

Speaking of hops, the Vic Secret and Galaxy hops make an excellent combination that I haven't used before. I often found flavours reminscent of the Young Henry's Newtowner or the Matilda Bay's Fat Yak pale ale - two great Aussie Pale Ale beers that I love.

A tasty and straightforward recipe I'd encourage any pale ale fan to give a go.

Have you brewed the Cheeky Peak Aussie Pale Ale recipe or something similar? Leave a comment below and let me know.


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Wednesday, 28 April 2021

West Coast Pale Ale - All Grain Homebrew Recipe


Our second all grain brew - another fairly straightforward and simple recipe. Thanks to Cheeky Peak Brewery for the recipe.

All Grain Recipe

Vital Statistics

  • Batch Number: 12
  • Batch Volume: 25L
  • Pre-Boil Gravity: 1.054
  • Original Gravity: 1.010
  • Mash Water: 23.7L
  • Sparge Water: 9.7L

Fermentables

  • 5kg Pale Malt
  • 0.5kg Munich
  • 0.15kg Light Crystal

Hop Schedule

Boil Hops

  • 15g Magnum (13.2%) - 60 mins
  • 15g Centennial (10.2%) - 5 mins
  • 15g Citra (14.1%) - 5 mins
  • 15g Mosaic (15.5%) - 5 mins

Dry Hops

  • 30g Centennial (10.2) - Dry Hop 3 days
  • 30g Mosaic (15.5%) - Dry Hop 3 days
  • 20g Citra (14.1%) - Dry Hop 3 days

Yeast

  • US05

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Tuesday, 12 January 2021

Citra SMaSH Pale Ale Recipe (All-Grain)

This is my first all-grain brew - so I've decided to go with something very simple for my first brewing attempt on my new 35L BrewZilla

A SMaSH beer is an acronym for Single MAlt and Single Hop - which makes the recipe very straightforward. For the malt, I'll be using pale malt, and for the hop I'll be using one of my personal favourites, Citra.

Batch Number

  • 11

Batch Volume

  • 25L

Fermentables

  • 5kg Brewers Malt (2-Row Briess)

Pre-Boil Gravity

  • 1.042

Original Gravity

  • 1.047
Hop Schedule:
  • 12g Citra (14.1%) - 60 mins
  • 25g Citra (14.1%) - 10 mins
  • 15g Citra (14.1%) - 5 mins
  • 35g Citra (14.1%) - Dry Hop (3 days prior to bottling)

Yeast

  • US05

Mash Water

  • 21.75L

Sparge Water

  • 11.25L

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Moving to All-Grain Brewing

 Moving to All-Grain Brewing

After several home brew batches using extract only, and some partial mashes - I decided it was time to take the next step in my homebrewing journey and dive into all-grain brewing.

Getting into all-grain can be quite dauting - but I felt I had a reasonably sound knowledge in terms of brewing practice - I was already doing partial boils with some grains, so changing this from a partial to a full mash didn't seem like a huge leap - so long as I had the right equipment to do so.

Enter the BrewZilla - formerly known as the Robobrew. An all-in-one brewing vessel specially designed as an entry level unit to get people into all-grain homebrewing.

It comes in a 35L and a 65L version - I've gone with the 35L version as I just don't need to make batches as big as 65L

The Brewzilla has some excellent features - a programmable display for "step mashing", 2 heating elements, 1 x 1900W and 1 x 500W, a recirculation pump as well as a tap. It also comes with an immersion chiller which is really a must-have in order to cool a batch size this large in a reasonable amount of time.

At the time of writing, I've done only a single brew with the BrewZilla - and the difference in flavour between this and extract brewing truly is night and day - there is just no comparison.

So moving forward, my recipes will now be all-grain and am very much looking forward to future batches being made on my BrewZilla!


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Wednesday, 24 June 2020

I-Pete-A - American IPA Recipe

I-Pete-A - Extract IPA Recipe


Date: 20/6/2020
Batch Number: 10
Beer: American IPA
Extract/Ingredients:
  • 2 x 1.5kg Light Liquid Malt Extract (LME)
  • 200g Light Crystal
  • 100g Wheat Grain
  • 500g Dextrose
Hops:
  • Magnum (Bittering)
  • Ekuanot (Bittering/Flavour)
  • Mosaic (Flavour/Aroma)
  • Cascade (Flavour/Aroma)
  • Amarillo (Flavour/Aroma)
Yeast: US05
IBU: 59
Expected OG: 1.055
Expected FG: 1.012

Hop Schedule

  • 60min - 12g Magnum - 13.2%AA - 19.01 IBU
  • 30min - 14g Ekuanot - 14.7%AA - 19.01 IBU
  • 15min - 15g Mosaic - 15.5%AA - 13.84 IBU
  • 10min - 15g Cascade - 6%AA - 3.90 IBU
  • 5min - 15g Amarillo - 9%AA - 3.21 IBU
  • Dry Hop (High Krausen - approx 48 hrs into fermentation)
    • 2g Ekuanot (leftover)
    • 18g Amarillo
    • 15g Mosaic
    • 15g Cascade

Notes: This is basically a thrown together recipe using a bunch of leftover hops and grain that I had. My first attempt at a highly bittered IPA - by far the most IBU's I've had in one of my beers. For something different I've tried dry hopping early during high krausen only, so may not have as much fruity front end flavours as previous brews where I've dry hopped after 10 or so days of fermentation (ie. when fermentation is well and truly over)

Boil Details:

Initial Pot Volume: 8L
Steeping Grains: 2.5L
Grain Sparge/Rinse: 1L (I actually forgot to do this, oops)
LME: ~1L
LME Rinse/Sparge: ~1L
TOTAL BOIL SIZE: 13.5L 12.5L
Pitched at approx 23-24C. Temp dropped to 18C - raised to approx 19.5C during fermentation

Hydrometer Readings

Actual OG: 1.050 (+4 points for inaccurate hydrometer = ~1.054)


Tasting Notes

A little to bitter for my liking. I think the 30 minute addition was a little pointless and would have been better off being added later to impart less bitterness and more floral and fruity flavours from the hops.


Friday, 5 June 2020

Sierra Nevada Pale Ale Recipe

Sierra Nevada Pale Ale Recipe


Date: 31/5/2020
Batch Number: 9
Beer: American Pale Ale
Extract/Ingredients:
  • 1.5kg Light Liquid Malt Extract (LME)
  • 300g Light Crystal Malt
Hops:
  • Magnum (bittering)
  • Perle (bittering)
  • Cascade (flavour/aroma)
Yeast: US05
IBU: 39
Batch Size: 20L
Expected OG: 1.049
Expected FG: 1.012

Hop Schedule

  • 60 min - 5g Magnum - 13.2%AA - 8.32 IBU
  • 60 min - 19g Perle - 8.5%AA - 20.35 IBU
  • 15 min - 28g Cascade - 6.0%AA - 10.5 IBU
  • 0 min - 21g Cascade - 6.0%AA
  • Dry Hop - 21g Cascade - 6.0%AA

Notes: Going for the classic american pale ale. Very simple recipe - light malt, crystal grain, and classic cascade flavour hops for that traditional american pale ale taste. Batch size is reduced to 20L to get closer to the recommended OG of 1.052 for this recipe - simply add some more light malt accordingly to adjust to a larger batch size

Steps

  1. Put 7L of tap water into kettle/large pot and bring to the boil (put lid on pot to help it heat up faster)
  2. While waiting for the large kettle to boil, add 2.5L of tap water to a smaller pot/saucepan and heat to 71C
  3. While waiting for both pots to come up to temperature, add the 300g light crystal grain into a hop/grain bag
  4. Once the small pot reaches 71C, turn off the heat and steep the light crystal (in grain bag) in it for 30 mins.  You can dunk/move the grain in the pot like a tea-bag to ensure all the grain is wetted
  5. After 20 minutes (10 minute left of steeping), soak the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract in a tub of hot tap water to soften contents
  6. After the 30 mins has elapsed, sparge (rinse) the grains with 1L of hot tap water. Discard the used grain
  7. Remove the large kettle from the heat (regardless of whether or not it has boiled), and add all the liquid from the small pot and also add the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract - stirring whilst adding to help it dissolve
  8. Fill the light liquid malt extract container with hot tap water - leave to stand for a few minutes to dissolve the remaining contents. Add the contents to the large kettle
  9. Return the large kettle to the heat and wait for it to boil (ensure lid is not on the pot/kettle at this point)
  10. Once the large kettle is boiling, start a 60 minute timer and add the 60 min bittering hops (as per hop schedule above)
  11. After 45 minutes (ie. 15 minutes remaining in the boil), add the second set of hops (as per hop schedule above)
  12. Place the second 1.5kg light liquid malt extract into a sink of hot water to help soften contents
  13. After 60 minutes has elapsed (ie. 0 minutes remaining in the boil), remove the kettle from the heat and add the final set of hops (as per hop schedule above)
  14. Add the second 1.5kg light liquid malt extract into the kettle, stirring as you pour to help dissolve
  15. Place kettle in sink of water/ice water to cool (or use other cooling method - eg. immersion chiller) (also put the lid on the kettle)
  16. Once the wort in the large pot has cooled to less than 26 degrees, tip all the contents in the FV and stir to mix. You can use a filter/strainer to filter out the trub/large particles from the boil - I don't do this but you can if you prefer
  17. Top up the FV to 20L with cold tap water - ideal pitching temperature should be 20-24C - stirring constantly to mix and aerate the wort
  18. Pitch yeast
Pitched at 24C - put into fermentation fridge and dropped to 20C

Hydrometer Readings

Actual OG: 1.047

Day 7:

Actual FG:  

Tasting Notes



Friday, 10 April 2020

BentSpoke "Barley Griffin" Style Pale Ale Recipe

BentSpoke Barley Griffin Style Pale Ale


Date: 10/4/2020
Batch Number: 8
Beer: Pale Ale
Extract/Ingredients:
  • 1.5kg Light Liquid Malt Extract (LME)
  • 1.5kg Light Dry Malt Extract (DME)
  • 450g Wheat Grain
Hops:
  • Ekuanot (bittering & flavour/aroma)
  • Mosaic (flavour/aroma)
Yeast: US05
IBU: 28
Expected OG: 1.048
Expected FG: 1.012

Hop Schedule

  • 60min - 10g Ekuanot - 14.7%AA - 16.11 IBU
  • 10min - 10g Mosaic - 15.5%AA - 6.13 IBU
  • 10min - 10g Ekuanot - 14.7%AA - 5.82 IBU
  • 0min - 10g Mosaic - 15.5%AA
  • 0min - 10g Ekuanot - 14.7%AA
  • Dry Hop - 4 days - 15g Ekuanot - 13%AA
  • Dry Hop - 4 days - 15g Mosaic - 11.5%AA

Notes: The Barley Griffin is one of my favourite beers - got the hops from the Bent Spoke website - hoping to make something even remotely similar to this great beer. My IBU's are higher than what Bentspoke advertise on their website (18 IBU's) but we'll see what happens.

Steps

  1. Put 6L of tap water into kettle/large pot and bring to the boil (put lid on pot to help it heat up faster)
  2. While waiting for the large kettle to boil, add 4L of tap water to a smaller pot/saucepan and heat to 71C
  3. While waiting for both pots to come up to temperature, add the 450g wheat into a hop/grain bag
  4. Once the small pot reaches 71C, turn off the heat and steep the wheat hop/grain bag in it for 30 mins.  You can dunk/move the grain in the pot like a tea-bag to ensure all the grain is wetted
  5. After 20 minutes (10 minute left of steeping), soak the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract in a tub of hot tap water to soften contents
  6. After the 30 mins has elapsed, sparge (rinse) the grains with 1L of hot tap water. Discard the used grain
  7. Remove the large kettle from the heat (regardless of whether or not it has boiled), and add all the liquid from the small pot and also add the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract - stirring whilst adding to help it dissolve
  8. Fill the light liquid malt extract container with hot tap water - leave to stand for a few minutes to dissolve the remaining contents. Add the contents to the large kettle
  9. Return the large kettle to the heat and wait for it to boil (ensure lid is not on the pot/kettle at this point)
  10. Once the large kettle is boiling, start a 60 minute timer and add the first bittering hops (as per hop schedule above)
  11. After 50 minutes (ie. 10 minutes remaining in the boil), add the second set of hops (as per hop schedule above)
  12. After 60 minutes has elapsed (ie. 0 minutes remaining in the boil), remove the kettle from the heat and add the final set of hops (as per hop schedule above)
  13. Place kettle in sink of water/ice water to cool (or use other cooling method - eg. immersion chiller)
  14. Whilst waiting for the wort to cool, add 5L of cold tap water to the fermenting vessel (FV)
  15. Add the 1.5kg light dry malt extract to the FV, stirring whilst slowly adding to help it dissolve
  16. Once the wort in the large pot has cooled to less than 26 degrees, tip all the contents in the FV and stir to mix. You can use a filter/strainer to filter out the trub/large particles from the boil - I don't do this but you can if you prefer
  17. Top up the FV to 23L with cold tap water - ideal pitching temperature should be 20-24C - stirring constantly to mix and aerate the wort
  18. Pitch yeast
Pitched at 25C - put into fermentation fridge and dropped to 22C

Hydrometer Readings

Actual OG: 1.043 (+4 points for inaccurate hydrometer = ~1.047)

Day 7: 1.008 (+4 points for inaccurate hydrometer = ~1.012)

Actual FG:  1.008 (+4 points for inaccurate hydrometer = ~1.012)

Tasting Notes

Fermentation Day 7: Tastes good - Ekuanot as a bittering hop has definitely hit the mark. Initial thoughts are that it is more bitter than expected, but will likely balance out, especially after dry hopping

After bottling and letting condition for 7 days I tried the first one and it's definitely a winner. Without a doubt ekuanot is the bittering hop used - my version is perhaps a little more bitter, but also a little more "hoppy" which helps to balance this out. Mosaic is an excellent flavour addition hop and makes an excellent combination with the ekuanot.

I'm hoping to do a side by side comparison with the real deal soon which will help me further fine tune this recipe!

Source

https://www.bentspokebrewing.com.au/can-range/#can_range_1

Saturday, 4 January 2020

NEIPA Extract Recipe

NEIPA (New England IPA)

Date: 4/1/2020
Batch Number: 7
Beer: NEIPA
Extract/Ingredients:
  • 1 x 1.5kg Light Liquid Malt Extract (LME)
  • 1 x 1.0kg Light Dry Malt Extract (DME)
  • 1 x 0.5kg Wheat Dry Malt Extract (DME)
  • 300g Naked Oats
Hops:
  • Super Alpha (Bittering) - you can substitute this for any other bittering hop if you prefer
  • Centennial (Whirlpool)
  • Mosaic
  • Simcoe
  • Citra
Yeast: Safale S04
IBU: 23.4
Expected OG: 1.047
Expected FG: 1.012

Hop Schedule

  • 60min - 17g Super Alpha - 11%AA - 20.49IBU
  • 0min (5 min steep) - 27g Centennial - 9%AA - 3.4IBU
  • Dry Hop (High Krausen - approx 48 hrs after fermentation begins) - 10g Citra, 30g Mosaic, 30g Simcoe
  • Dry Hop (3-4 days prior to bottling) - 10g Citra, 30g Mosaic, 30g Simcoe

Notes: Hop schedule is a little unusual - essentially using up the centennial and citra hops I have left over from previous brews, and also using new packets of Mosaic and Simcoe which I've been keen to try.
Not sure I have enough hops to get a true NEIPA but this will certainly be the most amount of hops I've used in a brew before.
Concerned I may have been too light on with the bittering but wasn't sure how this volume of dry hopping would work, and also the significant amount of whirlpool centennial hops added which will likely add some bitterness as well.

Steps

  1. Put 7.5L of tap water into kettle/large pot and bring to the boil (put lid on pot to help it heat up faster)
  2. While waiting for the large kettle to boil, add 2.1L of tap water to a smaller pot/saucepan and heat to 71C
  3. While waiting for both pots to boil, add the 300g Naked Oats into a hop/grain bag
  4. Once the small pot reaches 71C, turn off the heat and steep the hop/grain bag in it for 30 mins.  You can dunk/move the grain in the pot like a tea-bag to ensure all the grain is wetted
  5. After 20 minutes (10 minute left of steeping), soak the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract in a tub of hot tap water to soften contents
  6. After the 30 mins has elapsed, sparge (rinse) the grains with 1L of hot tap water. Discard the used grain
  7. Remove the large kettle from the heat (regardless of whether or not it has boiled), and add all the liquid from the small pot and also add the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract - stirring whilst adding to help it dissolve
  8. Fill the light liquid malt extract container with hot tap water - leave to stand for a few minutes to dissolve the remaining contents. Add the contents to the large kettle
  9. Return the large kettle to the heat and wait for it to boil (ensure lid is not on the pot/kettle at this point)
  10. Once the large kettle is boiling, start a 60 minute timer and add the first bittering hops (as per hop schedule below)
  11. After 60 minutes has elapsed (ie. 0 minutes remaining in the boil), remove the kettle from the heat and add the final set of hops (as per hop schedule above)
  12. Place kettle in sink of water/ice water to cool (or use other cooling method - eg. immersion chiller)
  13. Whilst waiting for the wort to cool, add 5L of cold tap water to the fermenting vessel (FV)
  14. Add the light and wheat dry malt extract to the FV and stir to dissolve
  15. Once the wort in the large pot has cooled to less than 26 degrees, tip all the contents in the FV and stir to mix. You can use a filter/strainer to filter out the trub/large particles from the boil - I don't do this but you can if you prefer
  16. Top up the FV to 23L with cold tap water - ideal pitching temperature should be 20-24C - stirring constantly to mix and aerate the wort
  17. Pitch yeast
Pitched at 26C - put into fermentation fridge and dropped to 17.5C
Fermentation underway within 12 hours

Hydrometer Readings

Actual OG: 1.042 (+3 points for inaccurate hydrometer = 1.046)

Day 8: 1.008 (+3 points for inaccurate hydrometer = 1.011)

Actual FG: 

Tasting Notes

  • Tasted on Day 8 of fermentation and it tasted super juicy and great. Wondering if the secondary set of dry hopping is actually required - will do it anyway but I feel it would be great to bottle it as it is
Another top brew - would definitely do this one again! Not as hazy as I would like - potentially need more oats and/or wheat to help increase the haziness




Monday, 2 December 2019

Extract Brewing with Speciality Grains

Extract Brewing with Specialty Grains


When brewing using extract, a great way to add a bit more depth and character to your brews is to steep speciality grains. This is essentially the process of soaking, or "steeping" the grains in warm water to extract the goodness from them to enhance your brewing wort. The steeped water can then be added to the rest of your wort for the boil.

In all grain brewing, the grain bill will typically consist of a large majority of "base malts" - eg. light, dark, or amber, with a small percentage then being made up of speciality malts - such as crystal, wheat, munich etc.

With extract brewing, our liquid or dried malt extract make up the majority base, but we can still mix in specialty malts using the process below to enhance it.

It's important to maintain a certain ratio of water to grains in order to get the best flavour results from your steeping. The recommended ratio is approximately 1 gallon of water per pound of grain.

For those working on the metric system (as I do), that works out to 3.8L of water per 453g

453g - 3800ml
1g = 8.4ml

So, if I was using 250g of grain, I'd use 2100ml of water (8.4 x 250 = 2100) or 2.1L. This is meant as a rough guide, so I'd round it down to 2L in this case.

All you need to do this is a saucepan and a hop or grain sock to put the grains in. You could theoretically put the grains straight into the saucepan and then strain them out using a colander or sieve, so if you want to try this method then go for it.

  1. Calculate the amount of water you require as outlined above (roughly 8.4ml per gram of specialty grain). Add this volume of water to a saucepan and put on a stove to heat up
  2. Heat the water to approx 71C
  3. Once you've reached 71C, remove from the heat then submerge the grains in the water. If using a hop sock or bag, you can move/swirl it around in the saucepan (like a giant tea bag) to ensure all the grain is wetted
  4. Leave the grains to steep for 30 minutes. Obviously the temperature will drop from 71C during this time (as the saucepan has been removed from the heat) - this is fine and expected.
  5. If using a hop sock or bag, you can agitate the bag a little every 5-10 minutes to help with extraction
  6. After 30 minutes, remove the grain from the pot or saucepan
  7. Put the grains (in hop sock or not) into a sieve, and then rinse/sparge with 1L of hot tap water back into the pot
  8. Don't squeeze or wring the bag (if you're using one), this can cause bitterness in the extracted liquid
  9. Discard the grains - you don't need them any more
  10. Add the water from your steeping and sparging to your wort that you are going to use for your boil

Tuesday, 12 November 2019

James Squire "Chancer" Style Golden Ale Recipe

James Squire "Chancer" Golden Ale Style Recipe



Date: 1/12/19
Batch Number: 6
Beer: Golden Ale
Extract/Ingredients:
  • 1.5kg Light Liquid Malt Extract (LME)
  • 1.5kg Wheat Liquid Malt Extract (LME)
  • 150g Munich grains
  • 150g Crystal grains
Hops:
  • Super Alpha (bittering)
  • Amarillo (flavour/aroma)
Yeast: US05
IBU: 23.99
Expected OG: 1.042
Expected FG: 1.005

Hop Schedule

  • 60min - 14g Super Alpha - 11%AA - 16.87 IBU
  • 10min - 20g Amarillo - 9%AA - 7.12 IBU
  • 0min - 10g Amarillo - 9%AA
  • Dry Hop - 4 days - 25g Amarillo - 9%AA

Notes: Keeping this recipe fairly straightforward and simple - re-using leftover Amarillo hops from the previous recipe. Amarillo hops, munich and crystal grains are what is used in the James Squire Chancer Golden Ale (according to their website), so would be good to replicate some of the flavours found in that beer.

Steps

  1. Put 9L of tap water into kettle/large pot and bring to the boil (put lid on pot to help it heat up faster)
  2. While waiting for the large kettle to boil, add 2.1L of tap water to a smaller pot/saucepan and heat to 71C
  3. While waiting for both pots to boil, add the 150g Munich and 150g Crystal malt into a hop/grain bag
  4. Once the small pot reaches 71C, turn off the heat and steep the hop/grain bag in it for 30 mins.  You can dunk/move the grain in the pot like a tea-bag to ensure all the grain is wetted
  5. After 20 minutes (10 minute left of steeping), soak the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract in a tub of hot tap water to soften contents
  6. After the 30 mins has elapsed, sparge (rinse) the grains with 1L of hot tap water. Discard the used grain
  7. Remove the large kettle from the heat (regardless of whether or not it has boiled), and add all the liquid from the small pot and also add the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract - stirring whilst adding to help it dissolve
  8. Fill the light liquid malt extract container with hot tap water - leave to stand for a few minutes to dissolve the remaining contents. Add the contents to the large kettle
  9. Return the large kettle to the heat and wait for it to boil (ensure lid is not on the pot/kettle at this point)
  10. Once the large kettle is boiling, start a 60 minute timer and add the first bittering hops (as per hop schedule below)
  11. After 50 minutes (ie. 10 minutes remaining in the boil), add the second set of hops (as per hop schedule below)
  12. After 60 minutes has elapsed (ie. 0 minutes remaining in the boil), remove the kettle from the heat and add the final set of hops (as per hop schedule below)
  13. Add the 1.5kg liquid wheat malt to the kettle - stirring to dissolve
  14. Fill the liquid wheat malt container with hot/warm tap water to dissolve remaining contents and add to the kettle
  15. Place kettle in sink of water/ice water to cool (or use other cooling method - eg. immersion chiller)
  16. Whilst waiting for the wort to cool, add 5L of cold tap water to the fermenting vessel (FV)
  17. Once the wort in the large pot has cooled to less than 26 degrees, tip all the contents in the FV and stir to mix. You can use a filter/strainer to filter out the trub/large particles from the boil - I don't do this but you can if you prefer
  18. Top up the FV to 23L with cold tap water - ideal pitching temperature should be 20-24C - stirring constantly to mix and aerate the wort
  19. Pitch yeast
Pitched at 26C - put into fermentation fridge and dropped to 22C
Temp set to 20C after ~14hrs when signs of fermentation being underway

Fermentation Notes

  • Fermentation underway within ~12 hours
  • US-05 yeast sank to the bottom of the FV shortly after pitching - no floating on the top and causing "rafts" - hadn't seen this behaviour before

Hydrometer Readings

Actual OG: 1041 (+3 points for inaccurate hydrometer) 1044
Day 7: 1004 (+3 points for inaccurate hydrometer) 1007
Day12: 1004 (+3 points for inaccurate hydrometer) 1007

Actual FG: 1007
ABV: 5.45% (1044-1007 / 7.46 + 0.5)

Tasting Notes

Tasted on day 7 of fermentation - Unsure about the balance of flavors but perhaps expecting too much bittering. Will see how it is after some dry hopping and another 5-7 days to condition in the fermenter before bottling. No noticeable off flavors though

Tasted on day 12 when bottling. Malt flavours are quite pronounced -especially the Munich - very curious to see how it balances out after conditioning - concerned not enough bittering or hop flavour.

Tasted one week after bottling and very happy with how this turned out. As I expected (hoped) the flavours all definitely mellowed after bottle conditioning - the end result is a fairly light and refreshing beer - relatively low bitterness and nice presence of Amarillo hops - I'm happy with the amounts used and feel this will make a good base to try experimenting with different hop varities to get an idea of what they all taste like

Source

Inspired by Fast Homebrew on Youtube and the good folks at Aussie Home Brewing

Wednesday, 6 November 2019

Dedicated Brew Fridge & Temperature Controller

Dedicated Brew Fridge & Temperature Controller

In one of my previous blog posts I mentioned my ongoing battle against home twang and some of the common suggestions on how to eliminate it's off-flavours from home brewed beers.

One of the most common suggestions to brewing good beer is having decent fermentation control - and one of the best ways to control this is with a dedicated brewing fridge and temperature controller.

I've just purchased a second hand all fridge off Gumtree that will be used as my dedicated brewing/fermenting fridge to help improve the quality of my brews. It's a Fisher & Paykel C450 fridge that I've paired with an InkBird ITC-308 Wifi temperature controller.

The fridge - loaded with bottles for conditioning and the latest batch fermenting away

I toyed with the idea of a smaller bar fridge but was unsure about finding one that would comfortably fit my fermenting vessel. I also found that they weren't really any cheaper than full size fridges when buying second hand - plus getting a full size fridge would allow increased flexibility. For example, I could easily store 2 fermenting vessels in a full size fridge, or, as I'm doing now, I can use it for bottle conditioning/storage as well as fermenting, win win!

The fridge has plastic shelves which would not withstand the weight of a 23L vessel fermenting beer, so I visited Bunnings and purchased some large diameter PVC pipe, cut a couple of pieces to size with a hack-saw and sat it underneath the bottom shelf that I'm using to support the fermenter.

The other shelves are bowing a little in the middle under the weight of bottles that are conditioning - I'm trying to think of a way to reinforce these, but for the time being I'll just try not to overload them too much.

The temperature controller I decided on is the Inkbird ITC-308 Wifi - which is working great! The best thing about this controller is the simple "plug and play" nature of it. It comes with a standard power outlet/socket to control heating and cooling - so for me it was simply a matter of plugging the fridge into the "cooling" socket, setting the temperature on the controller and attaching the probe to the fermenter, and we're set!

The wifi component of this is great as well. It only connects to 2.4GHz wifi networks, and it logs to a centralised/cloud system so you can access and control your inkbird from anywhere. You need to create a free account with Inkbird as part of the setup - and when you login to this (using a free app on your phone) you can view the current temperature, adjust the settings/parameters, and also view a log of the temperature (temperature is logged every 15 minutes)

Would highly recommend the Inkbird ITC-308 wifi temperature controller - it's affordable price and easy setup make it a must have to control the heating/cooling for your homebrewing setup.

Some screenshots from the Inkbird app are below;

Main screen showing the current temperature and whether cooling or heating is currently active

Options screen where you can adjust heating/cooling parameters and settings

Graph logged automatically every 15 minutes showing probe temperature



Balter XPA Style Recipe



Date: 9/11/19
Batch Number: 5
Beer: XPA
Extract/Ingredients:
  • 1.5kg Light Liquid Malt Extract (LME)
  • 0.5kg Light Dry Malt Extract (DME)
  • 1.0kg Wheat Dry Malt Extract (DME)
  • 0.25kg Wheat Grains
Hops:
  • Citra
  • Centennial
  • Amarillo
Yeast: Fermentis Safale US-05 (dry)
IBU: 33.3
Expected OG: 1.047

Hop Schedule

  • 60min - 15g Citra - 13.5%AA - 22.19 IBU
  • 10min - 12g Citra - 13.5%AA - 6.41 IBU
  • 10min - 12g Centennial - 10%AA - 4.75 IBU
  • 0min - 12g Centennial - 10%AA
  • 0min - 12g Amarillo - 9%AA
  • Dry Hop - 4 days - 10g Citra - 13.5%AA
  • Dry Hop - 4 days - 10g Centennial - 10%AA
  • Dry Hop - 4 days - 20g Amarillo - 9%AA
(note: Dry Hop - 4 days means adding dry hops 4 days prior to bottling)

Steps

  1. Put 10L of tap water into kettle/large pot and bring to the boil (put lid on pot to help it heat up faster)
  2. While waiting for the large kettle to boil, add 2L of tap water to a smaller pot/saucepan and heat to 71C
  3. Once the small pot reaches 71C, turn off the heat and add the 0.25kg wheat grains to a hop/grain bag then steep it in the smaller pot for 30 mins.  You can dunk/move the grain in the pot like a tea-bag to ensure all the grain is wetted
  4. After 30 mins has elapsed, sparge (rinse) the grains with 1L of hot tap water
  5. Add all the liquid from the small pot into the large kettle and wait for it to boil (if it hasn't already). Discard the used grain
  6. Once the large kettle is boiled - remove from heat and add the 1.5kg light liquid malt extract - whilst stirring in the large pot to help dissolve
  7. Return large kettle to heat and wait for it to boil (ensure lid is not on the pot/kettle at this point)
  8. Fill the light liquid malt extract container with hot tap water - leave to stand for a couple of minutes to dissolve remaining extract in the container - add contents to large kettle
  9. Once the large kettle is boiling, start a 60 minute timer and add the first bittering hops (as per hop schedule below)
  10. After 50 minutes (ie. 10 minutes remaining in the boil), add the second set of hops (as per hop schedule below)
  11. After 60 minutes has elapsed (ie. 0 minutes remaining in the boil), remove the kettle from the heat and add the final set of hops (as per hop schedule below)
  12. Place lid on kettle and allow to stand for 10 minutes
  13. After 10 minutes, place kettle in sink of water/ice water to cool (or use other cooling method - eg. immersion chiller)
  14. Whilst waiting for the wort to cool, add 5L of cold tap water to the fermenting vessel (FV)
  15. Add all the dry malt extracts to the FV and stir to mix/dissolve - be sure to remove any clumps
  16. Once the wort in the large pot has cooled to less than 26 degrees, tip all the contents in the FV and stir to mix. You can use a filter/strainer to filter out the trub/large particles from the boil (optional)
  17. Top up the FV to 23L with cold tap water - ideal pitching temperature should be 20-24C - stirring constantly to mix and aerate the wort
  18. Pitch yeast
Pitched at 24C - moved to fermentation fridge and dropped temperature to 22C
Dropped to 20C after ~18hrs when fermentation was underway

Fermentation Notes

  • Fermentation underway within 18 hours
  • Set temperature to 20C +- 0.5C
  • Fermentation subsiding/slowing by day 3
  • Krausen mostly dropped by day 4-5 - still a thin floating layer but not persisting as it has previously with US05 - beer mostly cleared

Hydrometer Readings

Actual OG: 1041 + 3 points for inaccurate hydrometer (1044)
Day 5: 1006 + 3 points for inaccurate hydrometer (1009)
Day 9: 1006 + 3 points for inaccurate hydrometer (1009)
Day 13: 1006 + 3 points for inaccurate hydrometer (1009)
ABV: (1041 - 1006) / 7.46 + 0.5 = 5.19%
Bottled Day 13 with carbonation drops (1 drop per 375ml)


Tasting Notes

  • First taste before pitching yeast (when taking OG sample) - quite bitter - hopefully didn't go overboard with the bittering hops
  • Tasted on day 5 (of fermentation) - bittering quite pronounced but a definitely sweet undertone but may not be enough to balance it out. May need dry hopping but haven't attempted this yet. Recipe calls for dry hopping (as per link below)
  • Tasted on day 9 (of fermentation) - bittering has subsided a little and hop flavour much more pronounced - much more balanced. No noticeable off flavours
  • Tasted on day 13 (of fermentation) when bottling - balance seems good - dry hopping has given it a nice fruity punch - very interested to see how this develops once carbed and cold
  • Tasted after just 1 week of bottling and this is hands down the best beer I've made. Has zero off flavours, and has an excellent balance of bitterness and flavour from the other hops. Wouldn't change anything if I were to brew it again. Credit to homebrew-recipes.com (link under Source below) for creating such a great and accurate recipe!

Photo


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