homebrewing book

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Gman20
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homebrewing book

Post by Gman20 »

so i recently picked up The Everything Homebrewing Book its been a good read so far and come acrossed some interesting recipes too

one actually tells u how to use Brettanomyces suggesting to give 9 months to drink suppossed to give a taste thats "off kilter" adding earthy,spicy,pineaple/fruity flavors to the beer but warns to be very careful unless u want all ur beer to be brett c.

also another one that takes a year to make. amps up abv by continusly feeding it sugar thru out the fermentation eveytime it slows down and a lil more sugar and wine yeast also using different types of sugar each feeding too. at 23%abv this stuff is would pack a punch.


anyways ive come a long way since a bought that little brown keg planning out my next recipe coming up here in the next week so just goota decide what to do next????


by the way anyone use Brewers Friend for recipe calculation? i used it for last batch and even tho i just bottled it the flat beer tastes a lil more bitter than i was expecting maybe this could mellow out tho after a month or so
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mashani
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Re: homebrewing book

Post by mashani »

Brett C tastes like hay and pinapple to me. They are right to warn you about it because if it goes wild it's hard to get rid of. It lives somewhere in my house, and I get 2-3 beers infected with it every summer. The good thing is that I actually like Brett C beers, and if it's not an all brett beer you can just drink them early while the brett flavors are still "mellow" and it's only a little bit funky.

If you want to know what other stronger varieties of brett taste like when aged, try an Orval Trappist beer (look for bowling pin shaped bottle). That will taste like a blanket covered with horse sweat, and shoe leather. (it is an acquired taste LOL).
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Gman20
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Re: homebrewing book

Post by Gman20 »

cant imagine id like the taste of horse sweat and shoe leather..... i dont think i coud even acquire a taste like that
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jimjohson
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Re: homebrewing book

Post by jimjohson »

mashani wrote:Brett C tastes like hay and pinapple to me. They are right to warn you about it because if it goes wild it's hard to get rid of. It lives somewhere in my house, and I get 2-3 beers infected with it every summer. The good thing is that I actually like Brett C beers, and if it's not an all brett beer you can just drink them early while the brett flavors are still "mellow" and it's only a little bit funky.

If you want to know what other stronger varieties of brett taste like when aged, try an Orval Trappist beer (look for bowling pin shaped bottle). That will taste like a blanket covered with horse sweat, and shoe leather. (it is an acquired taste LOL).

with a taste profile like that why would you want to? :laugh
"Filled with mingled cream and amber
I will drain that glass again.
Such hilarious visions clamber
Through the chambers of my brain
-- Quaintest thoughts -- Queerest fancies
Come to life and fade away;
Who cares how time advances?
I am drinking ale today."

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Chuck N
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Re: homebrewing book

Post by Chuck N »

jimjohson wrote:
mashani wrote:Brett C tastes like hay and pinapple to me. They are right to warn you about it because if it goes wild it's hard to get rid of. It lives somewhere in my house, and I get 2-3 beers infected with it every summer. The good thing is that I actually like Brett C beers, and if it's not an all brett beer you can just drink them early while the brett flavors are still "mellow" and it's only a little bit funky.

If you want to know what other stronger varieties of brett taste like when aged, try an Orval Trappist beer (look for bowling pin shaped bottle). That will taste like a blanket covered with horse sweat, and shoe leather. (it is an acquired taste LOL).

with a taste profile like that why would you want to? :laugh
Wouldn't it just be cheaper to go to a local farm and lick one of the horses? :lol:
Things men have made with wakened hands, and put soft life into
Are awake through years with transferred touch and go on glowing
For long years.
And for this reason some old things are lovely
Warm still with the life of forgotten men who made them.

― D.H. Lawrence
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Crazy Climber
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Re: homebrewing book

Post by Crazy Climber »

Chuck N wrote:Wouldn't it just be cheaper to go to a local farm and lick one of the horses? :lol:
Maybe in addition to a Borg member named 'myhorselikesbeer' we'd have one named 'myhorsetasteslikebeer'. :rofl:
Crazy Climber:
I'm not particularly crazy (IMO), and I don't rock-climb. It's just the name of a video game I used to like to play, back in the 80's.
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haerbob3
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Re: homebrewing book

Post by haerbob3 »

Chuck N wrote:
jimjohson wrote:
mashani wrote:Brett C tastes like hay and pinapple to me. They are right to warn you about it because if it goes wild it's hard to get rid of. It lives somewhere in my house, and I get 2-3 beers infected with it every summer. The good thing is that I actually like Brett C beers, and if it's not an all brett beer you can just drink them early while the brett flavors are still "mellow" and it's only a little bit funky.

If you want to know what other stronger varieties of brett taste like when aged, try an Orval Trappist beer (look for bowling pin shaped bottle). That will taste like a blanket covered with horse sweat, and shoe leather. (it is an acquired taste LOL).

with a taste profile like that why would you want to? :laugh
Wouldn't it just be cheaper to go to a local farm and lick one of the horses? :lol:
there is app for that
im Leben Geduld ist eine Tugend
in Brau-es ist eine Anforderung

in life patience is a virtue
in brewing it is a requirement


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