Bayou Beer

All about beer brewing and drinking in South Louisiana.

Belgian Dubbel #1

February 17th, 2013

With one Belgian finished and another still fermenting I’m plotting out my dubbel……………..   Changes are certainly necessary given the hard time I’ve had getting these beers to finish fermenting.    After reading “Brew like a Monk” I’m a little concerned with my pitching rates vs other beers.      The trippel finished around 1.019 when I was looking for 1.012.  The Belgian Golden Strong took 3 weeks to get to under 1.010.   So for this beer I started the WLP530 in a 5000ML flask because that yeast produces so much krausen a 2000ml flask can’t contain it.

This beer will be brewed 3/3/2013

Recipe Details

Batch Size Boil Time IBU SRM Est. OG Est. FG ABV
6 gal 90 min 17 1.07 1.012 0

Style Details

Name Cat. OG Range FG Range IBU SRM Carb ABV
Belgian Dubbel 18 18B 1.062 - 1.075 1.008 - 1.018 15 - 25 10 - 17 0 - 0 6.3 - 7.6 %

Fermentables

Name Amount %
Pilsner (2 Row) Bel 13 lbs 76.47
Munich Malt 1 lbs 5.88
Candi Sugar, Dark 1 lbs 5.88
Aromatic Malt 8 oz 2.94
Caramunich Malt 8 oz 2.94
Special B Malt 8 oz 2.94
Sugar, Table (Sucrose) 8 oz 2.94

Hops

Name Amount Time Use Form Alpha %
Tettnang 2 oz 60 min Aroma Pellet 4.5

Miscs

Name Amount Time Use Type
Whirlfloc Tablet 35.27 oz 15 min Boil Fining
Calcium Chloride 26.46 oz 60 min Mash Water Agent
Epsom Salt (MgSO4) 26.46 oz 60 min Mash Water Agent

Yeast

Name Lab Attenuation Temperature
Abbey Ale (WLP530) White Labs 76% 66°F - 72°F

Mash

Step Temperature Time
New Mash Step 146°F 60 min

Notes

The dark candy sugar is actually the 90L dark candy syrup. 1.032 gravity, 1 pound. Mash with about 22 quarts of water. Prepare 10 gallons total water for brew.

Lagers of New Orleans

February 17th, 2013

I’ve recently been taking a “beer appreciation” class put on by the Crescent City Homebrewers and after our last class my friends and I ended up on Veterans and looking for a place to eat. We stumbled upon Lagers which is ideal for us. Walking in it rings pub not restaurants which is good. The waitstaff was right there smiling as we seated ourselves and a very nice server met us. They’ve got a huge selection of beers on tap which I honestly didn’t get time to review. My beer loving friends and I had no issues finding beers we wanted and quickly ordered. The beer tasted very good and fresh so no complaints for sure!

The menu had all sorts of choices most of which were beer inspired items.   I settled on the fish of the day sandwich.   We ordered and the items came out not too long after.    The sandwich was excellent.    Mahi Mahi cooked just right and served on a soft wheat but with great tasting sweet potato fries.

I’ll certainly stop at Lagers again.

Lager's International Ale House on Urbanspoon

Belgian Golden Strong

February 7th, 2013

Continuing with my sack of Dingeman’s Belgian Pilsner malt with Belgian Golden Strong Ale. It should be a good one!

How it Went: 2/9/2013

Great brew day. I made some adjustments and they all worked out. First off I went with a more rigorous boil. I’ve been following what I heard on the Jamil Show about a “barely moving surface” boil without considering where he was brewing vs where I was brewing. The high humidity of Louisiana has resulted in low boil off and therefore low gravity with how I’ve been brewing. I adjusted it up some today and the end result was right on gravity. Second I had some technical ideas on how to cool and siphon with my current equipment. I used my long plastic brewing spoon to keep my siphon from sucking up too much trub from the kettle and I upped the amount of water I use to cool my kettle. Probably the most clear and clean wort I’ve ever pulled. Cooled up it under 70 degrees, aerated and pitched my 2 liter starter after decanting off the extra starter wort.

Update 2/16/2013

I’m having some deja vu on this thing as the fermentation appeared to have stalled around 1.02.   I’ve transferred the beer with all it’s yeast which appears to have once again kicked up the fermentation.    I’ve moved it in to the house to sit at a higher temperature and hopefully finish.    If in a week it’s still above 1.014 I will pitch an active starter.   I’m apparently missing something about managing a Belgian fermentation.

Update 3/2/2013

This beer will finish out and taste very good.   Feb 22 it was around 75+% attenuation.   March 1 it’s right about 80+% attenuation and should be nice and dry at around 1.008 when I keg it on 3/4/2013.    I’m adjusting pitching rates for future beers and definitely giving padded time for fermentation when it comes to these Belgians.

Recipe Details

Batch Size Boil Time IBU SRM Est. OG Est. FG ABV
6 gal 90 min 3 1.072 1.007 8.5

Style Details

Name Cat. OG Range FG Range IBU SRM Carb ABV
Belgian Golden Strong Ale 18 18D 1.07 - 1.095 1.005 - 1.016 22 - 35 3 - 6 0 - 0 7.5 - 10.5 %

Fermentables

Name Amount %
Pilsner (2 Row) Bel 12 lbs 80
Sugar, Table (Sucrose) 3 lbs 20

Hops

Name Amount Time Use Form Alpha %
Saaz 4 oz 60 min Boil Pellet 4

Miscs

Name Amount Time Use Type
Lactic Acid 211.64 oz 60 min Mash Water Agent
Whirlfloc Tablet 35.27 oz 15 min Boil Fining
Calcium Chloride 26.46 oz 60 min Mash Water Agent
Epsom Salt (MgSO4) 26.46 oz 60 min Mash Water Agent

Yeast

Name Lab Attenuation Temperature
Belgian Golden Ale (WLP570) White Labs 78% 68°F - 75°F

Mash

Step Temperature Time
Mucho Maltose Step 148°F 60 min

Notes

Water profile is 100% Baton Rouge water. To be brewed February 10th 2013

Iron Brewer Homebrew Competition at Tin Roof

February 4th, 2013

Brasseurs a la Maison homebrew club decided to have an Iron Chef style competition where each team had to use Louisiana style ingredients to brew their beer. The end result is we have a whole lot of beer that’ll need drinking so we’ve decided to put on a mini-festival when we have the beer judged at Tin Roof brewery in Baton Rouge. People will have an opportunity to try beer made with such interesting things as chicory, red beans, jasmin rice, honey, peaches, Louisiana citrus and a couple others I can’t remember off the top of my head. For the sake of doing a little good for charity while we’re at it we decided to benefit the Baton Rouge food bank so we’re asking everyone who attend bring non perishable food items to donate to the food bank. Food donation for beer is a great trade. My team made the peach beer and I can tell you it’s quite a good beer. It should be a great event. Official flyer below:

Iron Brew Comp (Medium)

Belgian Tripel 1 – Brewing for Karbach Classic Competition

January 17th, 2013

So I heard about a contest that Karbach is having for Belgian tripel.  convenient because I just ordered a 55 pound sack of Belgian pilsner and some WLP530, WLP570 and WLP575 yeasts.   I was planning on going to Belgium anyway.    So here is my first shot at a tripel.  Hopefully it’s decent enough to submit. here is a link to the Karbach Facebook Post on it

3/4 teaspoon of calcium chloride and 3/4 teaspoon of epson salt added to mash water. Prepare 7 gallons of water with intention of mashing with 6 of it. With all water losses will need 7.5 in boil. 2 lost in grain absorbtion so 9.5 gallons of water total will go through this thing. 149F target mash temperature. 90 minute mash, 90 minute boil. 161-162F strike water temperature.

 

How it Went on 1/20/2013

Everything went great on the whole. I hit mash temperature, I hit PH and it all seemed to be going quite well. 75 minutes in to the boil the gravity was reading 1.063 in my refractometer and I had 2 pounds of cane sugar to add. I’m thinking great this is going to give me an additional .018 of gravity but at flame out the refractometer is reading 1.078ish. I’m going to have to research that and see what’s up. Regardless the bu:gu ratio is fine and I think the product will be fantastic.

Update 1/23/2013

Fermentation took off fine. Ambient temperature of about 65F which on day 3 with high Krausen has risen to 70F. This thing has been putting off some heat because the temperature controller is set to right under 60F and the temperature is still rising. This WLP530 yeast is certainly a showing yeast with a huge plume of krausen.

Update 1/27/2013

Fermentation is still going on. I think it slowed due to weather being a little cool here. The termperature is about 65F. I’ll rouse the fermenter some and run a light to warm it up. Should finish in the next couple of days. Right now it’s at about 60% apparent attenuation and tastes quite nice albeit sweet.

Update 2/6/2013

Fermentation has been interesting on this beer. I transferred the beer from from fermenter to fermenter in order to spur fermentation which it did. On 2/3/2013 I transferred to a keg and pressurized. Leaving it at room temperature it’s managed to ferment out to about 80%AA. It tastes fantastic and seems like it’ll dry out a tad more in the next day or so which I hope it does quickly being that I have to ship it off to the Bluebonnet Brew Off for 2013. Overall I think this beer will be a winner. It’s a good balance between spiciness, Belgian yeast character and smooth maltiness. That being said anyone attempting to ferment out a 1.080 beer at ambient temperature of around 65F better pitch big and be ready to nurse it to the finish line.

Update 2/9/2013

This beer was shipped out to the Bluebonnet Brew Off. Other than the fact that it’s probably only carbonated to 2 volumes it is fantastic. I’m upping the carbonation in anticipation of shipping it to Karbach. It’s truly a great beer but at 2 volumes it isn’t giving a big puffy head. Although I believed it to be at 3 volumes when it was bottled it apparently lost too much carbonation and didn’t produce the head. It had the taste but wasn’t impressive in presentation. So I”m adding a volume and hoping to get better results.

Update 2/13/2013

Ok this is strange. The beer is now too sweet at about 3.5 volumes CO2. It appears to be showing more sugar at later servings. It’s got the right presentation now with the CO2 but tastes sweeter. Perhaps its the cold???? Lets hope the folks who judge this beer get it a little warm. Still tastes nice just too sweet.

Tasting Notes on 3/13/2013

I don’t know what was going on 2/13/2013 but this beer is very good for me.  It finished around 1.017 which was about as high as is allowed in a lot of the trippel examples I saw in Brew Like a Monk.    It has plenty of Belgian spice which come through and the assertive Amarillo hops are certainly there.   I think it has as good a shot as any in the Karbach Carboy Classic which is where it’s about to be heading.

Recipe Details

Batch Size Boil Time IBU SRM Est. OG Est. FG ABV
6 gal 90 min

Style Details

Name Cat. OG Range FG Range IBU SRM Carb ABV
Belgian Tripel 18 18C 1.075 - 1.085 1.008 - 1.014 20 - 40 4.5 - 7 0 - 0 7.5 - 9.5 %

Fermentables

Name Amount %
Pilsner (2 Row) Bel 17 lbs 85
Cane (Beet) Sugar 2 lbs 10
Aromatic Malt 0.5 lbs 2.5
Wheat Malt, Bel 0.5 lbs 2.5

Hops

Name Amount Time Use Form Alpha %
Saaz 1 oz 60 min Boil Pellet 4
Amarillo 1 oz 45 min Boil Pellet 9.5
Amarillo 0.5 oz 10 min Aroma Pellet 9.5
Saaz 0.25 oz 0 min Aroma Pellet 4

Yeast

Name Lab Attenuation Temperature
Abbey Ale (WLP530) White Labs 76% 66°F - 72°F

Notes

3/4 teaspoon of calcium chloride and 3/4 teaspoon of epson salt added to mash water. Prepare 7 gallons of water with intention of mashing with 6 of it. With all water losses will need 7.5 in boil. 2 lost in grain absorbtion so 9.5 gallons of water total will go through this thing.

Louisiana State Homebrew Competition Coming

January 2nd, 2013

I was really excited to see this posted by fellow Louisiana beer bloggers. I’m reposting this from BR Beer Scene who reposted it from The Beer Buddha. Very exciting to me who’s already got a half dozen competition entries brewed specifically for aging towards next years Dixie Cup. I have more than enough for this contest as well.

1ST ANNUAL LOUISIANA STATE HOMEBREW COMPETITION!
COMING THIS NOVEMBER 2013!

We’ll be organizing beer and brewing events including tastings, dinners, competitions and more!
Start planning or brewing your beers now. The competition and events will take place in New Orleans, though you will not need to be present to compete.
Some things we have in mind
-Commercial beer tastings
-Beer dinners and pairings
-Club competition with club booths (public event)
-Beer tour via street car or walking/boking
-Brewing and recipe design classes
-Brewery/Distillery bus tours
-Awards ceremony and dinner
-Big group brew
Please keep checking back for more details on events in the months to come! We will be posting more information soon!

All 23 BJCP beer categories will be allowed for entry, with ribbons going to the top three beers in each category.
Prizes from sponsors will also be awarded.
The competition will be open to residents of Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas and Arkansas only.
Judging will take place over the course of a weekend in November, to be determined.
Rules and regulations to be posted by the end of January 2013.
If you would like to be involved we are looking for BJCP certified judges and volunteers.
We are looking for sponsorship of events and awards. Please email Aaron at aaron@brewstock.com for more information!
Happy homebrewing and good luck!

Centennial and Amarillo Pale Ale

December 30th, 2012

So the big hit lately has been the IPAs. The Simcoe/Centennial was a big hit so now on to the next popular hop for IPA. This will be a tad of a kitchen sink beer since I’m using what’s left of some ingredients.

Update December 31 2012

I ended up using 1/3 pound Crystal 45 and 2/3 pound Crystal 60. The brewday went fine. Mashed at 151F, ran off 7 gallons, boiled 70 minutes and gravity was hit. Pitched a one liter starter and fermentation was going great within 12 hours. The beer looks very bright and beautiful. This should be quite a good IPA.

I am a tad concerned about the phosphoric acid. It seemed to take quite a bit to get the PH down.   The concentration on the bottle I have is apparently only 10% where I read others using it at 85% concentration.   More research is apparently required on this and I may go back to the lactic acid which has served me well.

Update January 17, 2013

After a fine fermentation that finished out perfectly this beer is carbonated and ready to drink. It’s quite good! I’ve definitely got a nose for the pineapple/tropical/mango character of this Amarillo and the Centennial continues to be my favorite secondary character for a beer. It just makes it taste more lovely. However there’s definitely an aftertaste with Amarillo hops. It lingers on the back of the tongue! I don’t know if it’s my preferred hop. I think the Simcoe/Centennial hop is a little better but I’ll reserve judgement for two weeks until this beer brightens.

Update January 23, 2013

Well….the beer has brightened and it tastes absolutely wonderful. There’s a complexity presented by Amarillo that really brings things together for taste. The beer looks wonderful, great head retention, great clarity and beautiful smell and taste. Amarillo can make a beer taste a little sharp in initial weeks. It should be used carefully in beers involving darker malts. This beer is bright, it’s tasty and probably my favorite American ale I’ve brewed.

Recipe Details

Batch Size Boil Time IBU SRM Est. OG Est. FG ABV
6 gal 60 min

Style Details

Name Cat. OG Range FG Range IBU SRM Carb ABV
American IPA 14 14B 1.056 - 1.075 1.01 - 1.018 40 - 70 6 - 15 0 - 0 5.5 - 7.5 %

Fermentables

Name Amount %
Pale Malt (2 Row) US 12.5 lbs 80.65
Pilsner (2 Row) Bel 2 lbs 12.9
Caramel/Crystal Malt - 60L 0.5 lbs 3.23
Caramel/Crystal Malt - 40L 0.5 lbs 3.23

Hops

Name Amount Time Use Form Alpha %
Amarillo 2 oz 60 min Aroma Pellet 9.5
Amarillo 1 oz 20 min Aroma Pellet 9.5
Centennial 1 oz 10 min Boil Pellet 10
Centennial 0.5 oz 1 min Boil Pellet 10
Amarillo 1 oz 0 min Dry Hop Pellet 9.5
Centennial 1 oz 0 min Dry Hop Pellet 10

Yeast

Name Lab Attenuation Temperature
California Ale V (WLP051) White Labs 73% 150.8°F - 158°F

Notes

This is a bit of a kitchen sink beer to finish off my sack of American 2-row. My wife absolutely loves this sort of beer. Water modification will be the same as project Nathan. Modify 6 gallons of water with 3/4 teaspoon gypsum. 1/3 teaspoon calcium chloride. Put 5 of that in the mash. Will try phosphoric acid in this beer instead of lactic. Will probably make up gravity with a couple of pounds of Belgian pilsner. I love that sweetness anyway.

Kartoffell Wurst Schmoren Potato Stew

December 23rd, 2012

Or potato sausage stew. This is a recipe I saw at a cooking demonstration at the Robert’s Cove Germanfest. It’s a locally famous recipe in their community belonging to Antonia Thevis Hoffpauir who gave the demonstration. She is an amazing person with quite a personality and I very much enjoyed the presentation.(not to mention the stew was awesome) I don’t remember the exact details but she had actually won a number of cooking contests including representing the entire state of Louisiana at some point. Anyway I wanted to post this recipe out here so I didn’t lose it. It’s appropriate to my beer website as I saw it at an Oktoberfest event and it’ll be great for my future Oktoberfest celebrations.

2lbs smoked sausage
10 large red potatoes, cubed
1/4 cup green onion chopped
1 large onion diced
2 1/2 cups of water
1/4 cup parsley chopped
salt and pepper to taste

Cut sausage into one inch pieces. Put in large pot with one cup water and boil until water evaporates and sausage browns in it’s own grease. Add chopped onions and saute until clear. Add cubed potatoes and 2 1/2 cups water. Bring to a boil then reduce heat. Add onion tops and parsley. Cover and simmer for about 45 minutes stirring frequently to prevent sticking until potatoes are tender. Serves six to eight. This recipe may be doubled if needed.

American Brown Ale with Amarillo

December 14th, 2012

So this should be interesting.   I have a pound of Amarillo to use and a lot of American pale malt.   Strike water is targeting 152F so infuse with 16 quarts of 165F water.   Modify 6 gallons of water with 3/4 teaspoon gypsum.   1/3 teaspoon calcium chloride.    Put 4 of that in the mash.   Acidify the water first with lactic acid.

How it Went:

So the Mash hit appropriately on temperature.    I decided to try batch sparging this time anticipating I’d get about the same efficiency at close to 70%.   It was a far quicker process than my typical continuous technique and ran off the exact 1.04 pre-boil gravity.   I was shocked really at how well it went.    My boil went not quite right and the post boil gravity was 1.046 which I’m a little puzzled about.   Fermentation took off extremely well and there was a nice 2 inch layer of yeast in less than 12 hours.   I anticipate this being a nice beer.

I will likely stick with the batch sparge.   It’s just too easy and gives the same results on my current equipment.

Tasting Notes From 12/26/2012:

Indeed it’s a very good beer. Good head retention, good aroma with some hops and some chocolate coming through. A bit nutty and chocolate in the taste. Body is medium and the finish is just barely a little astringent. It should smooth out to be very nice in about a month. The Amarillo hop is very nice in this beer. You just get that hint of citrus as a third or fourth flavor in this beer. It’s very subtle but makes this beer more complex and probably one that’ll score high in competition this year.

Tasting Notes From 1/3/2012:

The beer is still astringent.   It lingers.   I get almost a pineapple and then astringency.   It’s annoying because other than that slightly too assertive character the beer is very good.   Going to keep noting hoping to document the time for it to smooth out.   I suspect I didn’t have enough sweetness to balance as a piece of chocolate made the astringency disappear completely.      I believe I may up the crystal some next time.

Tasting Notes From 1/14/2012

Some time has done the hops well with this beer.   Indeed it did smooth out completely and tastes very nice now.   The finish on Amarillo hops is initially pine/pineapple like biting thing that smooths out more in to a nice citrus character.   Perhaps in moer moderation next time.

Recipe Details

Batch Size Boil Time IBU SRM Est. OG Est. FG ABV
6 gal 60 min

Style Details

Name Cat. OG Range FG Range IBU SRM Carb ABV
American Brown Ale 10 10C 1.045 - 1.06 1.01 - 1.016 20 - 40 18 - 35 0 - 0 4.3 - 6.2 %

Fermentables

Name Amount %
Pale Malt (2 Row) US 11 lbs 88
Caramel/Crystal Malt - 40L 0.5 lbs 4
Chocolate Malt 0.5 lbs 4
Caramel/Crystal Malt - 60L 0.25 lbs 2
Caraamber 0.25 lbs 2

Hops

Name Amount Time Use Form Alpha %
Amarillo Gold 1.75 oz 0 min Boil 8.5
Amarillo Gold 1 oz 15 min Boil 8.5
Magnum 0.75 oz 60 min Boil Pellet 14

Yeast

Name Lab Attenuation Temperature
California Ale V (WLP051) White Labs 73% 150.8°F - 158°F

Notes

biscuit malt is actually 3 oz caraamber and 1 ounce melanoidin. ferment at 66F. Strike water is targeting 152F so infuse with 16 quarts of 165F water. Modify 6 gallons of water with 3/4 teaspoon gypsum. 1/3 teaspoon calcium chloride. Put 4 of that in the mash. Acidify the water first with lactic acid.

Name: Dirty Brown American Ale
Description: bjs uit malt is actually 3 oz caraamber and 1 ounce melanoidin.   water modification same as last ipa.   ferment at 66F.
Post Boil Volume: 6.00
Pre Boil Volume: 7.00
Mash Time: 60.00
Boil Time: 60.00
Desired Original Gravity: 1.05
Desired Final Gravity: 1.01
Calculated Likely ABV% Based on Specified Gravities: 5.260
Users Targeted ABV%: 5.000
Desired CO2 Volumes: 2
Anticipated Brewhouse Efficiency: 68
Likely Original Gravity at 6.00 Based on Grains and Efficiency: @ 68% = 304 GU = 1.051

Grain: Pale Malt (2 Row) US qty:11
Grain: Caramel/Crystal Malt – 40L qty:0.5
Grain: Caramel/Crystal Malt – 60L qty:0.25
Grain: Chocolate Malt qty:0.5
Grain: Caraamber qty:0.25

Hop : Magnum qty:0.75 at:60 mins. AA=14.00
Hop : Amarillo Gold qty:1 at:15 mins. AA=8.50
Hop : Amarillo Gold qty:1.75 at:0 mins. AA=8.50

Yeast: California Ale V qty:2 Max temp: 70.0 Min temp: 66.0

Style Name: American Brown Ale (American Ale)
Dirty Brown American Ale Pocket Brewer XML Code»

Dirty Brown American Ale BeerXML Code»


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<Type>All Grain</Type>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
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<FinalGravity>1.01</FinalGravity>
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<TUN_SPECIFIC_HEAT>0</TUN_SPECIFIC_HEAT>
</MASH>
<Id>e08ff6ea-50ea-41a2-b1e3-4f76377ea45e</Id>
<BrewHouse>
<Efficiency>68</Efficiency>
</BrewHouse>
</RecipeClass>

<?xml version=”1.0″ encoding=”utf-16″?>
<RECIPE>
<NAME>Dirty Brown American Ale</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<TYPE>All Grain</TYPE>
<NOTES>bjs uit malt is actually 3 oz caraamber and 1 ounce melanoidin.   water modification same as last ipa.   ferment at 66F.</NOTES>
<BREWER>Pocket Brewer</BREWER>
<BATCH_SIZE>22.7115</BATCH_SIZE>
<BOIL_TIME>60</BOIL_TIME>
<BOIL_SIZE>26.4968</BOIL_SIZE>
<EFFICIENCY>68</EFFICIENCY>
<FG>1.01</FG>
<OG>1.05</OG>
<CARBONATION>2</CARBONATION>
<HOPS>
<HOP>
<NAME>Magnum</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<ALPHA>14.00</ALPHA>
<AMOUNT>0.0213</AMOUNT>
<USE>Boil</USE>
<TIME>60</TIME>
<NOTES>German Hallertauer hybrid, widely used in Germany</NOTES>
</HOP>
<HOP>
<NAME>Amarillo Gold</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<ALPHA>8.50</ALPHA>
<AMOUNT>0.0283</AMOUNT>
<USE>Boil</USE>
<TIME>15</TIME>
<NOTES>Unknown origin, but character similar to Cascade.</NOTES>
</HOP>
<HOP>
<NAME>Amarillo Gold</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<ALPHA>8.50</ALPHA>
<AMOUNT>0.0496</AMOUNT>
<USE>Boil</USE>
<TIME>0</TIME>
<NOTES>Unknown origin, but character similar to Cascade.</NOTES>
</HOP>
</HOPS>
<FERMENTABLES>
<FERMENTABLE>
<NAME>Pale Malt (2 Row) US</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<AMOUNT>4.9895</AMOUNT>
<TYPE>Grain</TYPE>
<YIELD>79.00</YIELD>
<COLOR>2.0</COLOR>
<ORIGIN>US</ORIGIN>
<SUPPLIER />
<NOTES>Base malt for all beer styles</NOTES>
<COARSE_FINE_DIFF>1.50</COARSE_FINE_DIFF>
<MOISTURE>4.00</MOISTURE>
<DISASTATIC_POWER>140.0</DISASTATIC_POWER>
<PROTEIN>12.30</PROTEIN>
<MAX_IN_BATCH>100.00</MAX_IN_BATCH>
<POTENTIAL>1.036</POTENTIAL>
</FERMENTABLE>
<FERMENTABLE>
<NAME>Caramel/Crystal Malt – 40L</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<AMOUNT>0.2268</AMOUNT>
<TYPE>Grain</TYPE>
<YIELD>74.00</YIELD>
<COLOR>40.0</COLOR>
<ORIGIN>US</ORIGIN>
<SUPPLIER />
<NOTES />
<COARSE_FINE_DIFF>1.50</COARSE_FINE_DIFF>
<MOISTURE>4.00</MOISTURE>
<DISASTATIC_POWER>0.0</DISASTATIC_POWER>
<PROTEIN>13.20</PROTEIN>
<MAX_IN_BATCH>20.00</MAX_IN_BATCH>
<POTENTIAL>1.034</POTENTIAL>
</FERMENTABLE>
<FERMENTABLE>
<NAME>Caramel/Crystal Malt – 60L</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<AMOUNT>0.1134</AMOUNT>
<TYPE>Grain</TYPE>
<YIELD>74.00</YIELD>
<COLOR>60.0</COLOR>
<ORIGIN>US</ORIGIN>
<SUPPLIER />
<NOTES />
<COARSE_FINE_DIFF>1.50</COARSE_FINE_DIFF>
<MOISTURE>4.00</MOISTURE>
<DISASTATIC_POWER>0.0</DISASTATIC_POWER>
<PROTEIN>13.20</PROTEIN>
<MAX_IN_BATCH>20.00</MAX_IN_BATCH>
<POTENTIAL>1.034</POTENTIAL>
</FERMENTABLE>
<FERMENTABLE>
<NAME>Chocolate Malt</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<AMOUNT>0.2268</AMOUNT>
<TYPE>Grain</TYPE>
<YIELD>73.00</YIELD>
<COLOR>450.0</COLOR>
<ORIGIN>United Kingdom</ORIGIN>
<SUPPLIER />
<NOTES />
<COARSE_FINE_DIFF>1.50</COARSE_FINE_DIFF>
<MOISTURE>4.00</MOISTURE>
<DISASTATIC_POWER>0.0</DISASTATIC_POWER>
<PROTEIN>10.50</PROTEIN>
<MAX_IN_BATCH>10.00</MAX_IN_BATCH>
<POTENTIAL>1.034</POTENTIAL>
</FERMENTABLE>
<FERMENTABLE>
<NAME>Caraamber</NAME>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<AMOUNT>0.1134</AMOUNT>
<TYPE>Grain</TYPE>
<YIELD>75.00</YIELD>
<COLOR>30.0</COLOR>
<ORIGIN>US</ORIGIN>
<SUPPLIER />
<NOTES />
<COARSE_FINE_DIFF>1.50</COARSE_FINE_DIFF>
<MOISTURE>4.00</MOISTURE>
<DISASTATIC_POWER>0.0</DISASTATIC_POWER>
<PROTEIN>13.20</PROTEIN>
<MAX_IN_BATCH>20.00</MAX_IN_BATCH>
<POTENTIAL>1.035</POTENTIAL>
</FERMENTABLE>
</FERMENTABLES>
<MISCS />
<WATERS />
<YEASTS>
<YEAST>
<NAME>California Ale V</NAME>
<TYPE>Ale</TYPE>
<VERSION>0</VERSION>
<FORM>Liquid</FORM>
<AMOUNT>2</AMOUNT>
<LABORATORY>White Labs</LABORATORY>
<PRODUCT_ID>WLP051</PRODUCT_ID>
<MIN_TEMPERATURE>66.0</MIN_TEMPERATURE>
<MAX_TEMPERATURE>70.0</MAX_TEMPERATURE>
<ATTENUATION>72.50</ATTENUATION>
<NOTES>Similar to White Labs California Ale Yeast, but slightly lower attenuation leaves a fuller bodied beer.</NOTES>
<BEST_FOR>American style Pales, Ambers, Browns, IPAs, American Strong Ale</BEST_FOR>
<FLOCCULATION>High</FLOCCULATION>
</YEAST>
</YEASTS>
<MASH>
<MASH_STEPS />
<VERSION>0</VERSION>
<GRAIN_TEMP>0</GRAIN_TEMP>
<TUN_TEMP>0</TUN_TEMP>
<SPARGE_TEMP>0</SPARGE_TEMP>
<PH>0</PH>
<TUN_WEIGHT>0</TUN_WEIGHT>
<TUN_SPECIFIC_HEAT>0</TUN_SPECIFIC_HEAT>
</MASH>
<STYLE>
<NAME>American Brown Ale</NAME>
<CATEGORY>American Ale</CATEGORY>
<CATEGORY_NUMBER>10</CATEGORY_NUMBER>
<STYLE_LETTER>C</STYLE_LETTER>
<STYLE_GUIDE>BJCP</STYLE_GUIDE>
<VERSION>1</VERSION>
<TYPE>Ale</TYPE>
<OG_MIN>1.045</OG_MIN>
<OG_MAX>1.060</OG_MAX>
<FG_MIN>1.010</FG_MIN>
<FG_MAX>1.016</FG_MAX>
<IBU_MIN>20</IBU_MIN>
<IBU_MAX>40</IBU_MAX>
<COLOR_MIN>18.0</COLOR_MIN>
<COLOR_MAX>35.0</COLOR_MAX>
<ABV_MIN>4.3</ABV_MIN>
<ABV_MAX>6.2</ABV_MAX>
<NOTES>A strongly flavored, hoppy brown beer, originated by American home brewers.  Related to American Pale and American Amber Ales, although with more of a caramel and chocolate character, which tends to balance the hop bitterness and finish.  Most commercial American Browns are not as aggressive as the original homebrewed versions, and some modern craft brewed examples.  IPA-strength brown ales should be entered in the Specialty Beer category (23).</NOTES>
</STYLE>
</RECIPE>

Took and Passed the BJCP Entrance Exam Today

November 30th, 2012

So I’ve decided to become a BJCP(Beer Judge Certification Program) certified beer judge.    I have heard and tend to believe it’ll make me a better brewer through the experience of judging others beers.   So I studied a lot and took the entrance exam which is the first step to becoming a judge.   I’m excited.  It was 200 questions in an hour and it wasn’t exactly easy.

 

Bayou Beer

All about beer brewing and drinking in South Louisiana.

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