Tuesday, April 25, 2017

My favorite equipment upgrades under $100

Nothing here breaks the bank but they all helped immensely, getting a more consistent product and process

False bottom perforated mash manifold:

 I tried bazooka screens and a custom handbuilt PEX manifold before springing for one of these.  Not a single stuck sparge since.  A crystal clear lauter only takes 2-3 qts.







Refractometer:


I use this to mainly to cut the boil when I've reached target gravity regardless of volume.  This isn't ideal for every beer where hop addition timing is more important, but it can help you understand boil off rate better, and make those additions as well.



High quality cooling coil:

Most brewers start with ice baths, and soon buy a budget coil when they realize how poorly ice baths work. I recommend a better coil from the start- welded hose fittings, more surface area. This is a Jaded Brewing Mantis, I use an older discontinued Jaded Wasp model, but this looks comparable or improved






Waterproof probe thermometer

I burned through several non-waterproof $15 probes before realizing how wasteful, and often inaccurate they are. I use this Thermoworks ChefAlarm model.






Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Kamas Lake 8/20/2016



Kamas Lake is about a 2 mile hike from the Pass lake trialhead, which is just north of baldy pass and mirror lake, but south of highline trailhead.  The trail is well traveled, and clearly marked.  It's flat if not slightly downhill for the first mile, then gets a little steep the last mile on the approach to the lake. The Cuberants lake trail splits off at about the 1-1.5 mile mark, and is a great hike, probably would have done that one if we had more time

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Backpacking Island Lake 7/16/2016

In 2011, there was so much snow in the uintas that we couldn't get in until mid July, so by coincidence, this trip was 5 years to the day of the last time I spent the night here

There was still considerable snow on the ground that tip, and we lost the trail a couple times becasue of it
This was 2011, you can still see snow on the far bank:




Tuesday, June 28, 2016

No boil-hops IPA

Brewed 6/11/2016

This is a take on the classic Bells 2 Hearted clone recipe, but the brew shop was out of crystal 40 so I grabbed something different:


11# 2 row
.75# patagonia crystal 55

No hops were added during the boil, only before and after:

FWH - 21g Apollo(18.5% AA)
Flame out- 28g apollo, 28g Mosaic(12% AA)
15min post flame out- 28g apollo, 28g Mosaic

US-05 yeast

OG 1.060



Backpacking Mohawk Lake 6/25/2016

I had gone to this lake about 5 years ago with my bother and have been wanting to return. It was a huge lake, and we had it all to ourselves.

Here's a pic from that trip:































Backpacking East Shingle Creek Lake 6/4/2016

The plan was to hit South Erickson lake, we closed out the season with a trip there last year and thought it would be neat to return.

Well, we went too early. The road was closed about a mile from the trailhead.
I can't tell if this guy was stuck or was just smart enough to know when to call it quits. Probably the latter, he was gone by morning:



Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Ultimate DIPA Tasting

Tasting my Ultimate DIPA 





This turned out pretty well, but not quite as well as I'd hoped

Appearance: slightly hazy, I didn't use finings because of the stainless dry hopper. I didn't want to gunk it up.

Aroma: Good, but one hop seems off.  my guess is the Amarillo, possibly the Mosaic. I've use much more Mosaic than Amarillo so that's where my money is.

Flavor: this is where this shines, the hop stand really comes through and presents a full, mouth coating immediate hop flavor. Fruity, piney, bitter.

Mouthfeel: A bit thin, I expected that based on the grain bill and mash schedule.  I was going for a classic 18th century IPA, which mush have had a very low FG

Overall Impression: Pretty good, not as good as I'd hoped.  I'm my own harshest critic, everyone else who's tried it has loved it.


What I'm changing next time:  Mashing a tiny bit higher, less bittering hops, swapping out to some more traditional american hops, maybe the 4 C's



Monday, August 11, 2014

Parti-Gyle Disaster

Backstory


I had a couple beers going into kegs from primary, and I decided I would do a parti-gyle mash to make 10 gallons, to pitch 5 gals with a slurry of each.

The previous beers were an american trappist clone, and a cascade lager, itself made with a slurry pitch from the lager yeast from my split batch, so it was 3rd generation.  The cascade lager was a kit I'd come into, and didn't really need so I was just having some fun with that, by brewing it as a lager, dropping some of the hops as well.


Recipe & Method


Here is the recipe for the parti-gyle batch:
18# 2 row
3# white wheat malt
2# Munich 1(7L)
.5# Caravienne 20

The plan was to take the first runnings, and make a Belgian Tripel, and take the second running and make a lighter lager.

the Tripel hops:
1oz perle 6.4aa @ 60 min
10 grams magnum at 12.4 aa @ 60 min
7 grams stryrian goldings 3.0aa @ 15 min

the lager hops:
1 oz styrian godings @ 60 min
10g magnum @ 60 min
1oz saaz @ 10 min

I built a spreadsheet to track the gravity as I drew off the wort, by taking a refractometer of the runnings every gallon, as well as the total gravity of the entire pot every gallon.  

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Split batch tasting

Split batch tasting

This was a 10 gallon batch, brewed 5/31/2014

Here is the recipe:

Malts/FermentablesMaltsterMashLbsSGCSRM%
Pilsner MaltWeyermann16.001.0381.081.0
Vienna MaltBriess3.001.0343.015.2
CarapilsBriess0.501.0321.02.5
Acidulated MaltWeyermann0.251.0301.01.3
Mash Efficiency:75 %19.751.0522.8
HopsGrownFormAAUOuncesWhenMinIBU
Hallertauer MagnumGermanyPellet12.01.00Boil6024.0
SaazCzech RepublicPellet2.92.00Boil6011.6
SaazCzech RepublicPellet2.52.00Boil102.9

38

Guest Tasting: Imperial Stout

This was passed to me via a friend of a friend

I'm referencing the BJCP guidelines, although I'm not a judge

A very gentle hiss upon opening, this pours thick and very-dark-brown-to-black leaving no head, just a faint ring of foam around the edges:

Monday, July 28, 2014

Ultimate DIPA


I love IPA. And I really love DIPA. Where I live, in Utah, all beer over 4.0% ABV must be sold in state run liquor stores*. They do not keep anything cold, so if you love that big fresh hop flavor, it can really be a crap shoot, especially spending $6-10 on a bottle of questionable providence.

I've been burned many times, and it's not like you can return the shit. You open the bottle and immediately get hit with wet cardboard, stale malt and hard candy. And you know, the worse it tastes now, the better it probably was, the worst I've had was Jamil's Heretic Brewing Evil Cousin, I bet it was spectacular when it was fresh.  So I brew a lot of IPA/DIPA. I would estimate 60% of my output is one of those styles

This recipe was the result of combining many years of experience of cloning the world's top IPA's, crafting my own recipes, and some reading I'd recently done, Mitch Steele's excellent book "IPA"