The Scottish Ale is well carbonated and forms a good head when poured. Tastes like beer, nothing special or amazing, but decent.
The Pumpkin Ale only has a hint of pumpkin to it, is not as carbonated, and has an almost syrupy texture, but is not syrupy tasting (it's dry like a beer should be, not sweet) Almost like unsweet, super-light pumpkin flavored pancake syrup (if anyone ever makes such a god awful beast).
But it does have a bit of a kick to it. Not so much in the mouth, but in the head. I had about half a liter and was a bit tipsy.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Pumpkin Ale bottling
Pat and I bottled the Pumpkin and Scottish Ale's.
We racked from secondary to the bucket because the spigot on the bucket made bottling SOOO easy. Added priming sugar to the bucket to induce carbonation in the bottles.
We racked from secondary to the bucket because the spigot on the bucket made bottling SOOO easy. Added priming sugar to the bucket to induce carbonation in the bottles.
Stirring
Stirred all three gallon jugs (Maple Cinnamon Mead and the two pineapple experiments) by circleing jugs on flat surface. Moved ALL fermenters onto table in corner of basement.
I've noticed that the two Pineapple ones aren't super active. The straight pineapple's balloon has some size to it, but the pineapple / apple / raisin one blew up a little bit, and then died back off. Both are still producing visible bubbles at the surface, just not much.
I've noticed that the two Pineapple ones aren't super active. The straight pineapple's balloon has some size to it, but the pineapple / apple / raisin one blew up a little bit, and then died back off. Both are still producing visible bubbles at the surface, just not much.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Pulled-a-Recipie-Outta-My-Ass Maple Cinnamon Mead
For Paul and Leigh!
1.5 lbs Fischer's Natural Pure Raw Honey (Walmart) (Darker in color than most)
12.5 fl oz Maple Grove Farms pure maple syrup (Walmart)
approx 1/2 cup Dextrose Corn Sugar
1/2 oz chopped raisins
1 cinnamon stick
1/4 packet bread yeast
Brought honey, syrup, and raisins with three jars of water (one syrup and two honey to wash them out) to a boil.
Broke up cinnamon stick and added at end of boil
Cooled with ice
prepped yeast with a pinch of corn sugar in half a cup of water
Poured yeast and must into gallon jug. Topped up to a gallon with water. Very dark colored.
approx 1.125 Specific gravity
1.5 lbs Fischer's Natural Pure Raw Honey (Walmart) (Darker in color than most)
12.5 fl oz Maple Grove Farms pure maple syrup (Walmart)
approx 1/2 cup Dextrose Corn Sugar
1/2 oz chopped raisins
1 cinnamon stick
1/4 packet bread yeast
Brought honey, syrup, and raisins with three jars of water (one syrup and two honey to wash them out) to a boil.
Broke up cinnamon stick and added at end of boil
Cooled with ice
prepped yeast with a pinch of corn sugar in half a cup of water
Poured yeast and must into gallon jug. Topped up to a gallon with water. Very dark colored.
approx 1.125 Specific gravity
Monday, November 17, 2008
Pineapple Experiments
Cleaned out 2 one gallon glass jugs (from Carlo Rossi crap).
In one, emptied about two and a half 48oz cans of Walmart pineapple juice and approx 1/8 cup sugar.
In the other, the other half a can (24oz) of pineapple juice, 1.5 quarts of WalMart apple juice, one can Shop'n'Save Apple Juice frozen concentrate (plus it's three cans water), 1oz box raisins, and 1/4 cup sugar.
Mixed up 1/2 packet of rapid rise bread yeast in warm water (boiled it first and then iced it to cool it down) with a sprinkle of sugar. Added it half and half to each jug and put a balloon on top of each for a trap.
In retrospect, these needed more sugar. I wanted to make a dry wine of each, but didn't realize that generally speaking, all wines ferment dry, and are sweetened after they're done and stable.
In one, emptied about two and a half 48oz cans of Walmart pineapple juice and approx 1/8 cup sugar.
In the other, the other half a can (24oz) of pineapple juice, 1.5 quarts of WalMart apple juice, one can Shop'n'Save Apple Juice frozen concentrate (plus it's three cans water), 1oz box raisins, and 1/4 cup sugar.
Mixed up 1/2 packet of rapid rise bread yeast in warm water (boiled it first and then iced it to cool it down) with a sprinkle of sugar. Added it half and half to each jug and put a balloon on top of each for a trap.
In retrospect, these needed more sugar. I wanted to make a dry wine of each, but didn't realize that generally speaking, all wines ferment dry, and are sweetened after they're done and stable.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Apfelwhups
I'm stupid, those Apple Juice containers were 96oz (3 quarts), not gallons. picked up two more of them from the store. I've edited the above to reflect this.
- Added another bottle and about a half to top the Apfelwein up to the neck of the bottle. Found the top was not sealing properly for the first 20-24 hours, had to tape it down.
- Added another bottle and about a half to top the Apfelwein up to the neck of the bottle. Found the top was not sealing properly for the first 20-24 hours, had to tape it down.
Pumpkin Ale third step
Transferred Pumpkin Ale and Scottish Ale that Pat started on his own to secondary's. Tasted small amount of pumpkin, was hoppy aromatic, but not overpowering, had very little carbonation feel to it. Scottish Ale tasted more refined but less flavorful. Bottled half a bottle of Scottish with half a teaspoon of cane sugar (after we all had a drink or two out of it...)
Saturday, November 15, 2008
First Apfelwein
http://www.homebrewtalk.com/f25/man-i-love-apfelwein-14860/
5 gallons of WalMart Apple Juice (in 3 quart bottles)
approx 2 lbs dextrose (corn sugar)
1 five gram packet of Montrachet Wine Yeast
cleaned carboy and put in 2 gallons of apple juice with funnel
added all corn sugar and washed down funnel with another half gallon
Shook carboy until all sugar was dissolved
added all but half a bottle
prepped yeast in half a cup of water and added through funnel
finished juice (only 3 3/4 gallons total right now) and capped
5 gallons of WalMart Apple Juice (in 3 quart bottles)
approx 2 lbs dextrose (corn sugar)
1 five gram packet of Montrachet Wine Yeast
cleaned carboy and put in 2 gallons of apple juice with funnel
added all corn sugar and washed down funnel with another half gallon
Shook carboy until all sugar was dissolved
added all but half a bottle
prepped yeast in half a cup of water and added through funnel
finished juice (only 3 3/4 gallons total right now) and capped
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Pumpkin Ale second step
Pat and I started Pumpkin Ale
http://www.thebrewsite.com/2004/10/11/pumpkin_ale_recipe.php
We made minor changes to the recipie due to availability of ingredients
- It called for 1lbs Vienna Malt 4L, we used 3.6L
- It called for .5lbs crystal Malt 40L, we used 1lbs 20L
- We didn't have a scale to weigh Wheat malt extract
- 3lbs bag was approx 9 cups, so we used 1.5 cups
- also, it was a 55% wheat and 45% barley mix of malt extract
- The MT.Hoods and Hallertauer hops were not available, but research showed that Mt. Hood is usually 4-5% acid, and the Hallertauer is stronger (5-6%)
- Used US Goldings (4.5%) for the Mt. Hood, and Sterling (6%) for the finishing hops
Pat bought a 30L Turkey Friar that worked purrrfectly for boiling the wort
Put pumpkin and grains into pot and heated.
After bringing to the initial boil, we poured the whole thing (slowly) through a wire mesh strainer to pull out the pumpkin matter, and then the grains. I pressed the pumpkin in the strainer to extract moisture. A little bit of pulp went through.
We returned to a boil and added dry and syrup malt extract, brown sugar, molasses, and US goldings Hops. boiled for 45 minutes and then added Sterling for 15 more minutes.
After the complete boil, we added vanilla and pumkin pie spice. We then cooled the wort by running cold water though a copper coil submerged in the wort (good idea Pat)
Poured wort into fermenting bucket and pitched yeast.
http://www.thebrewsite.com/2004/10/11/pumpkin_ale_recipe.php
- 6-10 pounds of pumpkin
- 1 pound of Vienna malt, 4L
- ½ pound crystal malt, 40L
- ½ pound malted wheat
- 6 pounds light or amber malt extract
- 1 cup brown suger (optional)
- ½ cup molasses (optional)
- 1 ounce Mt. Hood hops (boiling)
- ½ ounce Hallertauer hops (finishing)
- ½ teaspoon vanilla
- ½ to 1 teaspon pumpkin pie spices (see below)
- Wyeast 1056, American Ale
We made minor changes to the recipie due to availability of ingredients
- It called for 1lbs Vienna Malt 4L, we used 3.6L
- It called for .5lbs crystal Malt 40L, we used 1lbs 20L
- We didn't have a scale to weigh Wheat malt extract
- 3lbs bag was approx 9 cups, so we used 1.5 cups
- also, it was a 55% wheat and 45% barley mix of malt extract
- The MT.Hoods and Hallertauer hops were not available, but research showed that Mt. Hood is usually 4-5% acid, and the Hallertauer is stronger (5-6%)
- Used US Goldings (4.5%) for the Mt. Hood, and Sterling (6%) for the finishing hops
Pat bought a 30L Turkey Friar that worked purrrfectly for boiling the wort
Put pumpkin and grains into pot and heated.
After bringing to the initial boil, we poured the whole thing (slowly) through a wire mesh strainer to pull out the pumpkin matter, and then the grains. I pressed the pumpkin in the strainer to extract moisture. A little bit of pulp went through.
We returned to a boil and added dry and syrup malt extract, brown sugar, molasses, and US goldings Hops. boiled for 45 minutes and then added Sterling for 15 more minutes.
After the complete boil, we added vanilla and pumkin pie spice. We then cooled the wort by running cold water though a copper coil submerged in the wort (good idea Pat)
Poured wort into fermenting bucket and pitched yeast.
Saturday, November 1, 2008
First step to Pumpkin Ale
Roasted pumpkin for Pumpkin Ale. Four pans on both oven racks.
Accidently left it in the oven overnight (No, not with the oven on...)
Next time, I'll just cook it on one rack at a time. The top ones are a little under-done and the bottom ones are a little burnt.
Scraped cooked pumpkin meat into two tupperware bowls, topped up with water, and put in freezer.
Accidently left it in the oven overnight (No, not with the oven on...)
Next time, I'll just cook it on one rack at a time. The top ones are a little under-done and the bottom ones are a little burnt.
Scraped cooked pumpkin meat into two tupperware bowls, topped up with water, and put in freezer.
Make-it-up-as-we-go Grape Jelly Wine
6 cans grape juice concentrate
approx 3.5 cups sugar
dash of clover honey (leftover from Mead)
4oz Wild Huckleberry Honey
1/2 packet Fleischmann's rapid rise yeast
- activated in about a cup warm water and a teaspoon of sugar
brought all ingredients (minus yeast) to boil in 6 quart pot with water to fill it
Filled Mr. Beer fermenter to 10.5 quarts
- used a fair amount of ice to bring temp down
Added yeast
approx 3.5 cups sugar
dash of clover honey (leftover from Mead)
4oz Wild Huckleberry Honey
1/2 packet Fleischmann's rapid rise yeast
- activated in about a cup warm water and a teaspoon of sugar
brought all ingredients (minus yeast) to boil in 6 quart pot with water to fill it
Filled Mr. Beer fermenter to 10.5 quarts
- used a fair amount of ice to bring temp down
Added yeast
End of the first Apple Wine
Paul and Katlyn liked the apple wine, although Paul thought it was thin.
Mom said it was yeasty, and that she could taste the plastic bottle that it was in.
All of it drank now
Mom said it was yeasty, and that she could taste the plastic bottle that it was in.
All of it drank now
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