Trying out the Good Belly sour method. Did a crazy simple recipe (I hesitate to call it a recipe). Dissolved and heated 3lb of wheat dme. Added it to a sanitized fermenter with a quart of pomemgranite blackberry Good Belly. Maybe mid-week I'll bring it out of the fermenter for a 20 min hop boil.
May suck... May be good. Who knows?
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Swenocha is a vast bastard of brewing knowledge - Wings_Fan_In_KC
Fermenting:
nada... zip...
Drinking:
nada... zip... maybe an N/A beer here and there...
Just so I don't disturb you and the rest of the family when I break in to get the Goose Island and Blackstone Black Belle. What room is that?
I do have your address.
Oh, Ill be liberating the Yazoo Sours too.
Naked Cat Brewery On Tap
Yazoo Sue Smoked Porter
Octoberfest
Le Petite Saison
Czech Pale Lager
A Toast to Big Fuzzy Russian Imperial Stout at 10%
Belgian Blond
Flower Power IPA
4 Kilts Clueless Belgian Strong
One Wort Two Yeast with Wyeast 2206
One Wort Two Yeast with WLP940
Shipwreck Saison
Got a Cream Ale kegged up, coming around but some lagering should do it well. Brewed up an old favorite Amber Ale of mine, haven't brewed it in a long while. Home toasted malt makes it pretty special.
I brewed 3 gallons of special bitter with some C120, C75, a pinch of pale chocolate, and Lallemand London ESB to try it out. It apparently doesn't fermenter maltotriose, so I substituted 8oz of sugar for some of the extract I used. If you mash, they recommend you mash < 152 unless you are planning on using sugar (and it is totally normal to use sugar in real British beer anyways, I just used a bit more then normal). I used perle and goldings as my hops. Based on my research this will still be end up full bodied.
Up Next: 2Daves Irish Red Fermenting/Conditioning Ladybug Lager Drinking: FedoraDave's American Ale -- Schöenwald Schwarzbier -- Littlejohn's Ale -- King Duncan's Porter
Brewing NEIPA tomorrow and kegging Stone VE 09-09-09. Was just going to be my mom and John coming over as he mentioned at Christmas he'd like to watch me brew one day. Well.............not only are they coming, but my son, his girlfriend, her mom and grand mom and my grand puppies and my in-laws.
That escalated quickly I'm off to make salsa for tomorrow.
Naked Cat Brewery On Tap
Yazoo Sue Smoked Porter
Octoberfest
Le Petite Saison
Czech Pale Lager
A Toast to Big Fuzzy Russian Imperial Stout at 10%
Belgian Blond
Flower Power IPA
4 Kilts Clueless Belgian Strong
One Wort Two Yeast with Wyeast 2206
One Wort Two Yeast with WLP940
Shipwreck Saison
Hey All, got 5 gallons of a Dark ale to bottle tomorrow,and am planning on brewing 2 Mr. Beer Aztecs,each with different extra malt and hops next week.
With little to no temp control days coming soon,this may be my curtailment batches. I could maybe sneek one in yet,depending on how cool it stays here. Cheers
Bringing the goodbelly beer to a boil. Lesson learned... need to sit a bit warmer with the probiotics. Recent reading says 80-90, and i was a bit over 70. A subtle sour after a week. Should have gotten some new ph strips as well. No matter. Rdwhahb. Should be tasty. Dropping 1/3oz Amarillo in for 15 min after the boil and then back in the fermenter with s-33. Then off to Mantra for a pint...
Sent from my SM-G930P using Tapatalk
Swenocha is a vast bastard of brewing knowledge - Wings_Fan_In_KC
Fermenting:
nada... zip...
Drinking:
nada... zip... maybe an N/A beer here and there...
swenocha wrote:Lesson learned... need to sit a bit warmer with the probiotics. Recent reading says 80-90, and i was a bit over 70. A subtle sour after a week.
So are you saying that you held the temp a little over 70 and you should have been more in the 80 degree range? And it's not as sour as you thought it would be?
ANTLER BREWING Drinking
#93 - Gerst Amber Ale Conditioning and Carbing
Different strains of lacto like different temps. The probiotic stuff probably likes it even warmer then 80... IE human integral temps are probably just fine. Because otherwise it would be sad inside of you and not do anything.
The stuff I got from my honey however, whatever strain that was, heating it to 170 degrees didn't kill it and it soured perfectly well at 60 degrees. I guess if you can survive the osmotic pressure of concentrated honey, you are a tough little bastard and nothing phases you.