Making the wort for the APA right now. First time doing whole grain brewing.
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It turned out pretty well for my first whole grain. Cleared out well, good aroma and body.might still be a bit early...but how'd it turn out?
Nice! I still haven't made any beer this year. :slight_frown:It turned out pretty well for my first whole grain. Cleared out well, good aroma and body.
What?! Time to brew some more.But what I have is still good, and is depleting at a steady rate.
I see @Blind Owl getting through making the mash at which point he'd get impatient, consume all of the ingredients, then have @CrudeSasquatch shake him over his head until they both feel drunk.While awesome in theory my experience is that Home Brewing takes way to long. Much easier to by buy at the store and then drink as soon as it at the right temperature, instead of 5 weeks later. Could you imagine @Blind Owl having to wait 5 weeks before enjoying a beer?
Of course I am all in favor of recipes for home brews.
I resemble this comment.I see @Blind Owl getting through making the mash at which point he'd get impatient, consume all of the ingredients, then have @CrudeSasquatch shake him over his head until they both feel drunk.
Not sure I'd be up for drinking owl beer. Its not that I am bothered by it fermenting and aging in his gizzard, I'm just not sure I'm man enough to grab that spigot to get a pint.I resemble this comment.
Don't be scared. Maaahahaha.Not sure I'd be up for drinking owl beer. Its not that I am bothered by it fermenting and aging in his gizzard, I'm just not sure I'm man enough to grab that spigot to get a pint.
I recall watching something similar in a pair of episodes of the show Moonshiners about a year ago.So thinking of doing a long term brew (about six months or longer) this fall or early winter. One of the people I work with at my company makes his own whiskey as a family business. He has been nice enough to offer me a tour of this distillery and a bunch of their oak chips dripping with whiskey, the ones they use for aging.
I'm planning to use these in the secondary fermentation (about five or so months there). Anyone had experience using oak chip aging? Was thinking of putting them in a sanitized brew bag and let it sit in secondary 7-gal container.
The other question part of this. I'm also looking at it being a higher ABV, about 10% or above, so I'm thinking of using a liquid yeast. Anyone ever used those before? If so, what brand and strain?
Hoping to make a heavy hitting aged imperial stout.
A buddy and I did something similar to this last fall. We didn’t use a brew bag, but otherwise the same method. A couple things we noticed is that adding whiskey along with the wood chips is a great idea and helps bump up the abv. I think it was like 12oz of whiskey for a 5 gal batch.So thinking of doing a long term brew (about six months or longer) this fall or early winter. One of the people I work with at my company makes his own whiskey as a family business. He has been nice enough to offer me a tour of this distillery and a bunch of their oak chips dripping with whiskey, the ones they use for aging.
I'm planning to use these in the secondary fermentation (about five or so months there). Anyone had experience using oak chip aging? Was thinking of putting them in a sanitized brew bag and let it sit in secondary 7-gal container.
The other question part of this. I'm also looking at it being a higher ABV, about 10% or above, so I'm thinking of using a liquid yeast. Anyone ever used those before? If so, what brand and strain?
Hoping to make a heavy hitting aged imperial stout.