Friday, May 28, 2010
Portable Kegerator & An Awesome Summer
This Memorial Day weekend I'm heading to Ocean City, NJ (where the only oil in the water is from the cast of the Jersey Shore) to kick-off what's sure to prove a pretty awesome summer. I'll be renting a house with a few friends, relaxing, and of course, drinking lots of beer! In fact, I'll be debuting my portable kegerator (nicknamed "R2Beer2") to bring some homebrew with me. Once you have a kegerator in your home, it's really hard to go anywhere and not have fresh homebrew on tap. So, I decided I needed a kegerator for the road!
R2Beer2 is a converted IGLOO Ice Cube Maxcold 70-qt. Roller Cooler that I bought at Target. It can hold a 3 gallon corny keg and have room for a few bottles/cans as well. The cooler keeps ice for 5 days at an ambient temperature of 90F, which is perfect for the summer. I drilled a hole through the front for the shank and attached a faucet to one end and an elbowed tailpiece to the other (just to save a little room in the cooler) where the beer-out line is attached to. I got a 4" long MFL bulkhead from Austin Homebrew and drilled through the side of the cooler to install it. I'll hookup a small CO2 injector to the bulkhead on the outside of the cooler for serving and the gas-in line is connected on the inside. The whole project took about 45 minutes to assemble; I think I spent more time determining which parts I wanted/needed and ordering them online! I'll be serving the last of my Imperial Brown Ale in R2Beer2 this weekend, and when I return, I'll be filling the keg with some Irish Red Ale that I brewed last weekend for a camping trip at the end of June, where R2Beer2 will really be put to the test.
After my return from Ocean City, I'll be gearing up for the unofficial DC beer week leading up to SAVOR next Saturday. Tuesday night is ChurhKey's East Coast Craft Beer Cask Party. Wednesday night (if it rains and I skip playing tennis) is a Three Floyds tasting at the Brickskeller. Thursday night is an Odell's tasting, again at the Brickskeller. Friday night, at the Brickskeller once more, is their sold out Lupulin Reunuless featuring an all-star beer cast (Ken Grossman of Sierra Nevada, Kim Jordan of New Belgium, Rob Tod of Allagash, Sam Calagione of Dogfish Head, Greg Koch of Stone, Nick Matt of Saranac, Bob Pease of the Brewers Association, Bill Madden of Mad Fox, and possibly the great Charlie Papazian). Finally, Saturday night is the main event, SAVOR at the National Building Museum, featuring 70 breweries and food pairings. And on Sunday, I shall take a break, relax, and have a beer. Following SAVOR week, I'll be heading to Minneapolis in mid-June for the National Homebrewers Conference, which will be legendary if last year was any indication--more on that later!
Enjoy your holiday weekends! Cheers!
Friday, May 21, 2010
Scandinavian Beer & Award-Winning Homebrew
Last weekend, I entered three of my beers in the Spirit of Free Beer homebrew competition hosted by BURP (Brewers United for Real Potables), a local homebrew club that I recently joined. Although my Helles and Lambic didn't do that well, my IPA took second place in its category out of 29 entries! The beer was given a score of 42 (out of 50), which I was really excited about. In my judging experience, I rarely give scores in the 40s (I judged the American Amber/American Brown and Oatmeal Stout/Foreign Export Stout flights at the competition, and I think I only gave one beer above a 39), so this was really an honor for me. I'll pick up my medal/prize at BURP's next meeting in June. On the homebrew competition note, I just shipped my Sam Adams LongShot entries (Cinnabon Porter) at the beginning of this week, and thankfully the package arrived safely. I've mentioned it before, but I brewed a robust porter bottled with cinnamon & vanilla infused bourbon. It came out quite well and has been met with good reception from my friends; the judging starts at the beginning of June, and I have my fingers crossed!
Following a day of beer judging at the Spirit of Free Beer, I had a bunch of people over that night for a little homebrew tasting event. I served my Helles, IPA, Brown Ale, Lambic, and the Cinnabon Porter. Each beer was paired with a different cheese (Laura Chenel Chevre, Keen's Cheddar, Abbaye de Belloc, Mascarpone, and Pleasant Ridge Reserve respectively) recommended by Garrett Oliver, brewmaster at Brooklyn Brewery and beer author. I emailed Garrett on a whim, and he was nice enough to get back to me pretty quickly...and from Copenhagen at that. His suggestions were excellent and the pairings went over really well. I'm planning on another tasting event sometime in the fall, and I think I'm going to do a British ale series for that again with some sort of food pairing (maybe chocolate this time!).
After my tasting this past weekend, I actually had the chance to meet Garrett Oliver in person on Tuesday night at the National Geographic Society in DC where he hosted a talk/tasting entitled, "New Beers of Scandinavia." All the beers served were from Denmark, Finland, Norway, or Sweden, and there was really some winners on the list. My favorite was definitely the Nils Oscar Barleywine from Nils Oscar in Nykobing, Sweden. It had rich malty flavors (caramel, toffee, and some biscuit) with a light floral hop character. For a barleywine, it was incredibly smooth and very well-balanced. Runners-up would be the Huvila-X Porter from Malmgardin Panimo in Malmgard, Findland and the always tasty Mikkeller Beer Geek Breakfast from Denmark (though Mikkeller actually contract brews all their beer). In addition to the beers, some small plate appetizers were served including Alaskan Smoked Salmon, Swedish Meatballs, and Venison Sausage. The event was a lot of fun and proved to be a unique opportunity to try what are otherwise relatively rare brews. The event was co-sponsored by the Brickskeller and BURP members actually volunteered with serving the beers and running the event.
I'll be brewing an Irish Red Ale this weekend in anticipation of a camping trip at the end of June, and I'll also be putting together a little portable kegerator using a rolling Igloo cooler that can hold a 3 gallon corny keg (and keep ice for 5 days at 90F). Pictures of that to follow in the next few days. Also, SAVOR is coming up in DC in 2 weeks with all sorts of special pre-SAVOR events going on in the city. I'll be attending quite a few and reporting back! Cheers!
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Sam Adams Utopias
Yup, that's right, Sam Adams Utopias. And I tasted not one, but two different bottles of this rare and exquisite beer. Last Thursday, RFD in DC hosted a last minute Sam Adams tasting led by Mike Sheehan, the DC, MD, and WV District Manager for Boston Beer Company. It was a small group (maybe 20 people), which was really a perfect size for this type of tasting.
Mike served 6 different beers before opening the Utopias. First up were the three Sam Adams Imperial Series brews, which are pretty widely available: Imperial White, Double Bock, and Imperial Stout. In the interest of full disclosure, I'm personally not a huge fan of the Imperial Series, with the exception of the Stout. I find the hot alcohols in the White to be a little harsh, and I don't think it's particularly well-balanced. The Double Bock is better, but the malty sweetness can be a bit cloying at times. I do enjoy the Stout though, which is rich and complex with some smoky notes (my friend I was with blurted out, "Bacon!" as soon as she tasted it) that I believe are actually yeast derived as opposed to coming from the addition of smoked malt (though I could be wrong).
Next up after the Imperial Series were three beers from the Sam Adams Barrel Room Collection that are only available in Boston and Denver: American Kriek, Stony Brook Red, and New World Tripel. Despite not being a fan of the Lindemans version(way too sweet), I really enjoyed the American Kriek; the flavor was more reminiscent of fresh, tart cherries rather than an artificial fruit sweetness (the bottle reads, "AGED ON SWEET YET TART BALATON CHERRIES"). It wasn't cloying, but rather crisp and refreshing. The Stony Brook Red is supposed to be a Flanders Red Ale style, but I found it to have a significant barnyard character as compared to Rodenback Grand Cru for example. It's a definitely a tasty beer though--dry with the impression of sweetness from the yeast and a background oak note. The bottle reads, "BELGIAN STYLE WITH A HINT OF TART FRUIT AND TOASTED OAK CHARACTER." Lastly, the New World Tripel is described as, "GOLDEN IN COLOR WITH NOTES OF SPICE AND TROPICAL FRUIT." There was nothing particularly outstanding about the Tripel in my opinion (don't get me wrong, it was a very good beer; there's just nothing I can recall that stands out); it was your typical Abbey-style ale, but it was definitely well-balanced and extremely drinkable.
Finally, we come to the Utopias (and yes, it's actually "Utopias," not "Utopia"), the strongest real beer on earth clocking in at about 27% ABV. While other breweries produce stronger beers (Schorschbräu makes a 40% Eisbock, and BrewDog has their 32% Tactical Nuclear Penguin as well as their 41% Sink the Bismarck!), they are all basically distilled--the beers are brewed and then frozen to remove water, concentrating the alcohol content. Utopias are actually naturally fermented to 27% ABV without any freeze-distillation occurring. Served at room temperature, the beer is uncarbonated and is reminiscent of a fine liquor. Rich and warming, the beer has an inredibly complex flavor profile with notes of toffee, caramel, vanilla, oak, plum, smoke, and maple. It's very full bodied and almost slick on the tongue. The beer is far from harsh, and it's actually very quaffable, though it's certainly a sipper. I can think of nothing better than sitting by the fireplace on a cold winter day with a snifter of Utopias. And as if one bottle wasn't enough, Mike graciously opened a second bottle for a few of us after the tasting ended (and he even let me take the empty bottle home, which makes an excellent addition to my living room!). A bottle of Utopias is definitely pricey at about at least $150, but it is without a doubt a wonderful and unique brew. I can definitely see myself buying a bottle one day when I can bring myself to spend that much.
Before I sign-off for today, I want to take a moment and climb up on to my soapbox. Sam Adams sometimes gets badmouthed among the beer geek community for not being a craft brewery any longer or being no different than the big breweries. I can't tell you how many threads I've seen on various beer forums putting down Boston Beer Company, their products, and their values. To be honest, I really don't understand where this animosity comes from, and, pardon the French, but it's a steaming pile of bullshit. Yes, it's a public company, and yes, Boston Lager is available in just about every bar, supermarket, grocery store, and airport across the country, but in my opinion, that mainstream, widely-distributed beer has more flavor and complexity than some of the extreme beers being produced by smaller craft breweries. This tasting only confirmed my belief that Sam Adams was, is, and always will be a craft brewery at heart. Their Barrel Room Collection and Utopias speak for themselves in this regard, and they still support their roots via homebrewing events like the Patriot Homebrew Contest and the Longshot Competition. I think people forget sometimes that operating a brewery is still a business at its core. There's only so far you can get with a great, hand-crafted product; you still need to make smart business decisions and run a tight shift. Jim Koch has proven that good business and good beer can coincide, so cheers to Sam Adams for 25 years of excellence! Stepping off of soapbox now...
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Reinitzgebot Updates, Scottish Ales, & Competition Season
It's packaging time at the Reinitzgebot Brewery (the name I've given to my homebrewery)! Tonight I plan on kegging 3 gallons of Imperial Brown Ale and 5 gallons of Rye IPA. I think I'm gonna be doing the "quick & dirty" forced carbonation method as opposed to my normal "proper" way, since I'd like to have some beer available on Saturday night for visiting friends. The Munich Helles I brewed a few weeks ago is lagering in my chest freezer; it's been there about 2 weeks so far, and I plan on leaving it there for at least another 2-3 weeks before kegging that up.
I also purchased ingredients last weekend for the first beer I've designed myself. It's going to be a spin on the Vanilla Bourbon Porter I made at the end of last year, but using my own unique malt/hop bill. I'm dubbing the beer Cinnabon Porter, which will have a base of Crisp Marris Otter malt and a blend of specialty malts, including Chocolate, Brown, Crystal 40, and Crystal 60. I was hoping for Kent Goldings for the hop additions, but the homebrew store didn't have any, so I ended up getting Styrian Goldings and Fuggles. On brew day, I'm going to soak 2 vanilla beans and 2 cinnamon sticks in a small amount of bourbon and let it sit during the course of fermentation. This infused bourbon will then be added to the porter at bottling (I'm bottle conditioning this beer as opposed to kegging). I'm planning on entering this beer in the Sam Adams Longshot Competition this year, which I just registered for. This year's Longshot competition is only for Category 23--Specialty Beers and entries are due at the end of May. I'll be brewing next weekend to get this beer done in time for the deadline.
In other brewnews, I attended a Scottish Ale tasting a couple weeks ago at the Brickskeller in DC, which was led by Bruce Williams of Williams Bros Brewing Co. in Scotland. It was a great tasting plus Bruce was an interesting and engaging speaker. My favorite of his beers was his 80/- (80 Shilling) Scottish Ale, a malt forward, but incredibly well-attenuated beer. Bruce also did a really cool experiment to demonstrate the different carbonation levels in various beers. Williams Bros produces only real cask ale or bottle conditioned beers--no forced carbonation. Bruce poured a number of different beers into small glasses including two of his own, a Budweiser, a Bud Light, as well as a glass of soda. Over the top of each glass he stretched a condom that had been filled with some Sweet n' Low. The Sweet n' Low acted as nucleation points to force CO2 out of solution and up into the condom. Depending on the carbonation level of the various beers, the condoms inflated to different levels. The condom over the soda looked like it was about to blow off the glass (ha, he said "blow off").
The tasting couldn't have come at a more perfect time--I'll be in Philadelphia this weekend judging the first round of the National Homebrew Competition, and I've been assigned to the Scottish & Irish Ales for the morning judging session. In the afternoon, I'll be judging IPAs. I've also signed up to judge the Spirit of Free Beer competition in Fairfax, VA in the middle of May, and I plan on entering a few of my beers in that competition as well. Lastly, I just signed up to steward the second round of the National Homebrew Competition at the National Homebrew Conference, which I'll be attending in Minneapolis at the end of June.
Till next time, cheers and beer it forward!
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
IPAs, IPAs, and More IPAs!
The last few days have been chock-full of IPAs for me. For those who aren't familiar with the style, India Pale Ale (or IPA) was originally developed in Britain to survive the long voyage via sea to India. Hops, which act as a natural preservative of sorts, were added generously to the beer to prolong its life and ensure it was still drinkable when arriving in India. The style has evolved in the U.S. to be uber-hoppy, with some beers falling into the Double or Imperial IPA category. In general, a standard IPA should have a firm malt base to support the high hop bitterness, and although emphasis is on hop flavor and aroma, the beer should be fairly well balanced.
My IPA extravaganza started on Sunday when I brewed a 5 gallon batch of a Rye IPA. I used about 3 lbs of rye malt to lend a slightly spicy note to the beer and increase the complexity of the overall flavor profile. This was my first time brewing with rye, and one thing I was not prepared for was the fact that rye malt has not husks. Malted barley comes in the husk, which acts as a natural filter bed when lautering the mash. When brewing with wheat, which I have done before, you generally add rice hulls to compensate for the wheat's lack of a husk. I did not realize that rye was also huskless. What all this means, is that lautering was especially slow and difficult. I just barely got enough wort out of the mash tun for my 5 gallon batch. In hindsight, I should've used some rice hulls or added more water for a thinner mash. In the end though, everything worked out fine...I relaxed, didn't worry, and had a homebrew! After my lautering issues, everything went fine--I gratefully avoided a boil over this time. I used about 3.5 oz of hops (Mt. Hood and Columbus), and fermentation was vigorous less than 12 hours after pitching the yeast.
Continuing on the IPA theme, I went to ChurchKey in DC last night for their Mikkeller Single Hop IPA Bonanza. Mikkeller is a Danish brewery that produces some really extraordinary beers. One of the cooler things they've done is their Single Hop project. They brewed 10 different IPAs all using the same exact malt bill and a single hop. Each beer uses a different hop as to showcase the hop's true flavor and aroma. ChurchKey managed to get all 10 IPAs on tap at the same time. AWESOME. J.T. and I went and had 4 oz samples of each in two 5-beer flights. The beers were:
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP CENTENNIAL IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP CASCADE IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP AMARILLO IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP NELSON SAUVIN IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP EAST KENT GOLDING IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP TOMAHAWK IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP NUGGET IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP WARRIOR IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP CHINOOK IPA
MIKKELLER SINGLE HOP SIMCOE IPA
This event was really incredible; rarely do you get a chance to taste and compare individual hops. The most interesting for me were the Nelson Sauvin and Chinook. Although I've used Chinook in my own brewing before, I was blown away by the flavor profile when used alone. The hop had an inherent smokiness to it; it tasted almost as if smoked malt was used in the beer, though none was. The Nelson Sauvin, which I never even heard of before, is a hop from New Zealand with bold fruitiness and floral characteristics that was reminiscent of white wine (Sauvin == Sauvignon Blanc). I'm gonna have to get my hands on some Nelson Sauvin to use in an IPA; I'm thinking of doing a single-hop brew with it in fact.
That's about it for today. I'll be going to a tasting event on Thursday evening, so I'll have another update on Friday probably. This coming weekend I'll be brewing again (an Imperial Brown Ale this time), and then I'll have three beers fermenting at once--the ultimate trifecta! Till next time, cheers!
Friday, March 19, 2010
Fermentation Frenzy--A Homebrew Triathlon
Mike DiMarco should be proud--I'm running a triathlon...a beer triathlon that is. I'm brewing 3 beers in 3 weeks, and I'm already a third of the way there. This past weekend, I brewed a 5 gallon batch of a Munich Helles, a light lager that the BJCP describeds as having a "malty but fully attenuated Pils malt showcase" and "is not overly sweet, but rather focuses on malt flavor with underlying hop bitterness in a supporting role." The beer was made using mostly Pilsner malt, with a little Light Munich as well as Melanoidin. The hop bill was pretty simple--just some German Hallertauer at 60 minutes. For my first time brewing in my new place, the brewday went extremely well. My new stove was luckily able to bring 7.5 gallons of wort to a boil, though I had a small issue with a boil over, which took 45 minutes of scrubbing the stove with a brillo pad to clean it up. The one major issue I had was fermentation; this was only my second time doing a lager, and I didn't handle the yeast as well as I should've. Although I made a properly-sized starter using WLP838 Southern German Lager yeast, I kept the starter at fermentation temperature (about 52 F) instead of keeping it at room temp to grow the yeast. Once I pitched the yeast slurry, there was about a 72-hour lag time before fermentation really got going. In the end though, the yeast prevailed, and you can see the krausen forming on top of the beer in the picture above. I'll let the beer ferment out at 52 F before transferring it to the secondary and lagering at 34 F for at least a month.
While my Munich Helles is fermenting away, I'm going to brew a 5 gallon batch of a Rye IPA this Sunday, which should come out to be a hoppy and subtly spicy ale with a firm malt backbone. The malt bill calls for mostly American 2-row with a number of specialty malts, including Rye, Caramel 60, CaraPils, and a little Wheat. The hop additions are all either Mt. Hood or Columbus, and I prepared a starter last night using WLP051 California Ale V yeast.
Finally, next weekend I'll be brewing a 3 gallon batch of an Imperial Brown Ale using Maris Otter as a base malt with Brown Malt, Caramel 80, Caramel 120, and some Dark Belgian Candi Syrup. The hops include Columbus and Willamette, and I'll be using WLP001 California Ale yeast.
Tasting notes to come once all three beers are on tap...onward with the triathlon!
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
The Return of the Blog-O-Beer
I'm back like a bad case of herpes! I'm finally settled down in DC and just moved in to my newly purchased condom (umm, I mean "condo"...I'm still on the herpes subject apparently). Okay, enough about STDs! On to beer!
Along with my new home, comes a newly built kegerator. When I moved down to DC, I got a new 5.5 cubic foot chest freezer as a mini-kegerator in my temporary apartment. Now that I have my own place, I'm going to be using the chest freezer for lagering, and I moved my 14 cubic foot upright freezer down to DC from NJ. Last week I converted the upright freezer into a full blown kegerator with three taps. Despite a "small" snafu along the way, it's all setup and waiting for beer! I only need a drip tray and some tap handles to complete it, which are both on their way. Check out the pictures below!
I built the kegerator by drilling three holes through the door using a 1-inch hole saw. Shanks run through the door with faucets on the outside and 5 foot beer lines attached on the inside. The gas systems consists of a 5lb CO2 tank and a primary regulator connected to a 3-gauge secondary regulator, so I can control the individual pressure in three different kegs. My small snafu was the fact that one of the three holes I drilled cut through two wires in the door. I managed to fix the wiring by removing the back of the freezer door, digging through the insulation, and splicing the wires back together with. In a moment of stupidity though, I decided to plug the freezer in after drilling through the wires--this shorted out the circuit board in the LCD control panel on the freezer. Luckily, I was able to order a replacement control panel from Frigidaire--it arrived yesterday and everything is back to working order!
The only thing I'm missing now is beer. I'm going to be re-starting full-scale brewing operations this weekend when I brew my inaugural beer in my new home: a Munich Helles. I've setup an agressive brewing schedule for myself; I plan on brewing 3 weekends in a row in order to stock up the kegerator. The other two beers will be a Rye IPA and an Imperial Brown Ale. I'll have details plus pictures of my brew day after the weekend. Cheers!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)