Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Congrat's Ryan! My first delve into homebrewing was 1991 and nearly 50 batches later I don't brew as often as I first did, it's still a fun Sat/Sunday afternoon hobby. (With benefits...) It also lead to home winemaking which I do more often now, and a epically failed attempt at home distilling. (Distilled well, just tasted like jet fuel.)
:toast:
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Thanks Toad!
Big Brown Truck just dropped off my Oberon clone kit:
http://transasianaxis.com/photos/i.p...2794b35-me.jpg
Directions look simple enough.
The only thing I'm unsure about though is Step 8 where it says "The wort will begin to ferment within 24 hours. When fermentation is complete..." But it doesn't say how long that would be and I'm not sure what complete fermentation would look like. In Step 9 though it says if you're only doing a single stage to leave it in the primary for another week, as though it should be 1 week in Step 8. It also doesn't specify if I should do single or 2 stage fermentation on this and, I have no idea what the pros and cons are of single versus 2 stage except I remember seeing 2 stage will leave behind some of the sediment in the first fermenter. I guess I need to do some looking to see if anyone has posted anything about this specific recipe/kit.
I did add a bag of their Brew Vint alcohol boost to the order which is supposed to boost the ABV by 1%. I figured this was a good idea since their recipe says this kit as is should come out to 5.1% ABV while real Oberon is 5.8%.
It looks like it may also be a good idea to get a hydrometer too since I don't have one of those.
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Hey Ryan,
Single stage fermentation is better suited to lighter, lower alcohol beers. They ferment out quicker because there's fewer sugars to ferment out to alcohol. 2 stage ferments are more for the bigger bolder higher alcohol beers. They will often start with a robust fermentation then slow down as the rising alcohol content slows down the yeast action. After about a week when the airlock at the top of your fermenter slows down to 1 bubble a second or less, you draw off the liquid from the sediment as that sediment is all dead yeast and the longer your beer sits on it some "off flavors" can start to develop. Not bad flavors, but typically not what you're looking for. Don't worry, the liquid has PLENTY of life yeast still in it.
You definitely want a hydrometer. If your recipe or kit is calculated out to be 5.8% ABV and you bottle/keg it prior to reaching that, you're going to have a sweet beer. The sugars haven't fermented all the way out. Worst, it keeps fermenting in your bottles and you wake up at 3am to the sound of New Years Eve in your beer storage area as bottle blow. A keg won't do that until you try to tap it then you get a beer bath. On the flip side, your beer may have already reached it's 5.8% and it's just sitting there sucking up off-flavors from the sediment.
Most of all, don't get discouraged. Initially you may have some bad batches. Just the learning curve. Keep a recipe diary. Later I'll take a picture of mine so you can see how I recorded a batch so you can repeat success and learn from failure. And you will have failure.
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
AWESOME!
That is exactly what I needed to know. Makes perfect sense.
Hydrometer should be here tomorrow from Amazon.
Thanks a ton!
:toast:
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Batch 1 has officially begun primary fermentation!
Pretty sure I did everything to direction so, fingers crossed. :D
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Starting to get a little concerned. 12 hours later and no signs fermentation has started.
I realize it could take up to 24 hours so I'm being patient but, when I ordered this kit I had to order it with an ice pack for the yeast since it was liquid. However by the time it got here, the ice pack was melted. This was during warm weather. Wondering if the yeast warmed up enough to kill it.
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Well, we're now at 24+ hours and still zero fermentation.
I'm thinking I'm correct that the yeast was baked by the time I got it.
Can the wort be saved adding live yeast of the same type of yeast I've already added? I would think it would be possible since it hasn't undergone any fermentation and is just sitting as it was. I should be able to find White Labs 320 locally...
Guess I'll be emailing Adventures In Homebrewing since they packaged and shipped it to see what they say.
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Well, of course my first batch decides to make me look like an idiot after I've emailed AIH. :blackeye:
About to hit the sack and thought I'd give the carboy one more check when all of the sudden I see a bloop in the airlock!
I guess it was just a late bloomer! :D
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Just finished kegging the brew!
That turned into an adventure... The first keg had a leak around the lid so I had to clean and sanitize the second.
While kegging, I took a sample and if I read the hydrometer correctly both times, and my math is correct, I think the ABV works out to about 8.1%! :eek: A little higher than I expected if accurate. It's also a lot darker than Oberon.
Sampled it from the graduated cylinder and I was pleased to see it hadn't gotten infected! Tasted a very, very slightly more bitter than Oberon and had more of a banana-y taste and smell. I'll reserve final judgement for when it isn't flat and warm but I remain cautiously optimistic!
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
I had a still when I was a kid. I made grain alcohol with it. It tasted fucking horrible.
I looked into beer and boy was that too much work, heh.
Congrats if you've got it worked out. A close co-worker of mine makes a brewing system for beer. He's going to roll it out publicly one of these days.
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Malsua
I had a still when I was a kid. I made grain alcohol with it. It tasted fucking horrible.
I looked into beer and boy was that too much work, heh.
Congrats if you've got it worked out. A close co-worker of mine makes a brewing system for beer. He's going to roll it out publicly one of these days.
:lool:
I actually do want to add a still to my preps at some point. You know, for post-apocalyptic alcohol fuel only of course! :D Have had my eye on a nice one on eBay.
The whole brewing process wasn't actually as bad as I thought it might be. The hardest part was, I think, sanitizing everything and keeping it sanitized. The instructions I posted before were surprisingly easy.
That said, coming up with my own recipe versus brewing from a kit would be two completely different things. Very sure I'm not quite ready to come up with my own recipes yet since I've got no idea how various ingredients end up playing off of each other.
Should be ready to sample my brew Saturday/Sunday depending on how well it's taken the carbonation.
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Well, I officially tapped my first keg!
Flavor on the brew does seem pretty close to Oberon but as mentioned before a little more banana. Body is a bit heavier. And the color, a coppery brown, is definitely not Oberon's hazy gold. :D
After 3 days at 20 PSI it was decently carbonated but still flatter than I'd prefer. Upped the pressure to 30 PSI and I'm going to leave it a few more days, maybe try it again Monday or Tuesday night.
Once I've got it dialed in I'll make sure to bottle some of it.
I think next batch I'm going to try a different yeast strain and see what that results in.
Also going to have to find another Corny keg. Maybe see if I can swap the one I've got somehow.
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Well, I dun overcarbed it. :blackeye:
I think I should have just been more patient and left it at 20 PSI a couple more days.
Have done a couple tricks to get the carbonation down and the keg is sitting with the gas side vented at the moment.
It tastes fine and actually has an interesting velvety/creamy texture. It's just a bitch to pour from the tap and takes it's time to settle. :D
Re: My Start To Homebrewing
Looks like I got it decarbed enough I'm now getting a pretty decent pour!
:hyper:
Carbonation level is a bit more "noticeable" and less creamy which is more fitting for the brew.
Definitely going to be more careful force carbing next time!
It does seem like my kegerator isn't getting as cold as I'd like it to despite my temp controller being set to 36. Not sure if the probe is picking up cold off the freezer plate at the top or what. I get it all a bit colder and that should help with the carbonation/foaming situation further.
After sampling several glasses during my test pours (:blackeye:) I'd have to say the ABV is likely in the 6-7% range. I think my measurement of 8% seems high.