Friday, September 3, 2010
Labor day update
Coming soon! 2 wheat beers! One German style, one American style, plus the return of Rocktoberfest!
The Belgian Holiday ale is aging nicely in the bottles -- expect that the shipment of Cindy Lou Brew Two should commence in time for the holidays.
Stop by for a pint!
Friday, June 4, 2010
SB 1070 has been kegged!
Kegged the SB 1070 (Special Brew O.G. 1.070) last night. The O.G. calculated was closer to 1.085 (but the hydrometer said 1.060 - 10lbs of grain though)
Anyhoo, the leftovers from the F.G. (1.020 or so) tasted great. Can't wait to try it cold and carbonated.
The whole Arizona Senate Bill 1070 pisses me off - hence the mockery via beer -- profile this, assholes -- German style beer, American hops, Mexican agave. If you didn't know the beer was brewed in my kitchen, you may not know if it was an import or not. Well, except that it's unfiltered and has a crudely printed label. But that's just profiling.
Monday, May 3, 2010
Upcoming recipes
Unfortunately due to school, work, etc. brew days have taken a backseat. Tom and I have one planned coming up. I have a free weekend this weekend and will try something ridiculous. Tom wants to do a traditional German hefeweizen with agave. Sounds awesome. While researching recipe ideas, I came up with an idea for a Weizenbock, American style.
I'll use the German wheat extract, but use some bock style grains in the early stages. Instead of Hallertau and Tettenger hops, I'll use Amarillo. And I'll add agave syrup for flavor. The preliminary name of this beer will be Special Brew, OG 1.070, in honor of Arizona SB 1070. Yep, immigrant recipes and ingredients, made domestically (except for the agave and German grains/extracts). I'll probably go over the 1.070 OG (Original Gangsta (I'm looking at you, Sheriff Joe)) since I plan on using about 8-9 lbs. of malt extract, plus the agave syrup. It will be a dark, foreign flavored beer, that if profiled, I will remove the label.
I'll use the German wheat extract, but use some bock style grains in the early stages. Instead of Hallertau and Tettenger hops, I'll use Amarillo. And I'll add agave syrup for flavor. The preliminary name of this beer will be Special Brew, OG 1.070, in honor of Arizona SB 1070. Yep, immigrant recipes and ingredients, made domestically (except for the agave and German grains/extracts). I'll probably go over the 1.070 OG (Original Gangsta (I'm looking at you, Sheriff Joe)) since I plan on using about 8-9 lbs. of malt extract, plus the agave syrup. It will be a dark, foreign flavored beer, that if profiled, I will remove the label.
Sorry for the delay.
January was a busy brewing month. Tom and I brewed up a double batch one weekend -- a Belgian strong ale and a cream ale using some cherry infused whiskey I found at my parent's place over the holidays. The cherry infused whiskey was a recipe they'd use with the cherries from the tree in the back yard. I believe the recipe was something like this:
1 cup whiskey
1 cup sugar
1 cup cherries
let sit for 6 months. Enjoy.
The cherries were removed about 15 years ago, and the decanter sat untouched since then. We threw a vanilla bean in while it sat in the primary and added the infused cherry vanilla whiskey to the secondary.
Both were delicious, but the crowd favorite was the Belgian. I did really enjoy the cherry cream ale though.
Next was a Maarzen recipe that was brewed at the end of February and kegged in March. Unfortunately, the carbonation was a bit off on the early attempts (after 5 hours of kegging), but mellowed over time. A nice beer that was very quaffable.
January was a busy brewing month. Tom and I brewed up a double batch one weekend -- a Belgian strong ale and a cream ale using some cherry infused whiskey I found at my parent's place over the holidays. The cherry infused whiskey was a recipe they'd use with the cherries from the tree in the back yard. I believe the recipe was something like this:
1 cup whiskey
1 cup sugar
1 cup cherries
let sit for 6 months. Enjoy.
The cherries were removed about 15 years ago, and the decanter sat untouched since then. We threw a vanilla bean in while it sat in the primary and added the infused cherry vanilla whiskey to the secondary.
Both were delicious, but the crowd favorite was the Belgian. I did really enjoy the cherry cream ale though.
Next was a Maarzen recipe that was brewed at the end of February and kegged in March. Unfortunately, the carbonation was a bit off on the early attempts (after 5 hours of kegging), but mellowed over time. A nice beer that was very quaffable.
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