Tuesday, May 3, 2011

A Gallic Shrug and other updates

A long post today because I have been neglecting my blog.

As previously blogged I passed some of my Small Stout to a professional brewer (who shall remain nameless) to get some feedback, when I pressed him on it at the launch of Metalman Pale Ale the reaction was...... a Gallic Shrug. When he was chided for this recently by his sister he said he was trying to be positive about it (I think this is funny its the sort of response I would give). We have mutually decided it was a kit brew so it was never going to be a winner anyway.

My wheat beer received a slightly more positive reaction but still a bit Meh! The next beer that I made was a St Peters India Pale Ale which was a 3kg kit so supposedly better quality than the "kit and kilos" I had made. This is a nice, bitter, but not noticeably hoppy beer although I dry hopped it with 30 grams of East Kent Goldings for 5 days. It think it still needs some conditioning due to the alcohol content although it is about 4 weeks in the bottle now.

I also attended the launch of  Metalman which was a great night and a right tasty ale. At the launch I met MAF a friend from Beoir who gave me some Safbrew T-58 yeast and some gentle prodding to move on to extract brewing, which I did. I used the T-58 to brew a Belgian Dubbel although it is more often used for the golden Belgian ales I thought the peppery taste it imparts would work in a malty dubbel. I made this with dry malt extract and by steeping some Caramunich and Belgian Special B grains for flavour and colour and boiling with Styrian Goldings hops to give a balance to all that malty goodness. This is in secondary for 2 weeks now with 20 grams of crushed coriander seed after 2 weeks in primary. I have had a taste for quality control reasons and I would drink it from the fermenter. It is hard not to tap some every time I pass it.
This has proved to me that the quality difference between extract and kit beers is huge.

But why stop there? The extract/steeping grains brewing was so easy I thought how hard can all-grain brewing be? This was answered for me yesterday when I brewed my first all-grain beer. Tough but enjoyable. It may have been easier if I had shipped the family out for the day as there are so many distractions and I was just feeling my way around.
I have become a fan of American style pale ales, I just love those fresh zingy hops that they use. I had seen some Citra hops in an online brewing supplies store and the name suggests those citrussy flavours I like so I bought some for my pale ale. I wanted something a bit malty too and not as bitter as some of the American IPAs for easy drinking. I decided on an American Pale Ale which is not as bitter as an IPA but has plenty of hop flavour. I read somewhere that Citra can impart a harsh bitterness when used for bittering so got some cascade for bittering which reportedly has a grapefruit-like flavour, in the meanwhile I read that The Beernut had brewed an all-citra pale ale so decided to ask him at the Franciscan Well Easterfest how it turned out.
He thought it was fine and promised to open a bottle early to check but encouraged me to go ahead with the all-citra option anyway.
At the Easterfest there were 2 beers in the ball park for the beer I wanted to make Windjammer and Howling Gale, although neither of them had the hop profile I wanted they had the malty background with lots of - in their case - antipodean hops for that fruity flavour.
Brew day loomed large yesterday, so I re-read my recipe and weighed my grain and hops while Mrs Ciddytourist sewed my grain bags up. The grain bill for this ale is malted Pearl barley - a light fresh tasting type supposedly, Aromatic malt for that malty profile, Carapils malt for head retention and Biscuit malt for a light toasty flavour. 10 grams of Citra hops boiled for 60 mins and another 10 for 15 mins for 33 IBUs bitterness then 20 grams when I took it off the heat for flavour and aroma, there will be another 20-30 grams used to dry hop. The yeast is Nottingham Dry Ale yeast which is a relatively neutral yeast to let the malt and hops shine through. This smells very promising so far and it is hard not to give the airlock a sniff every time I pass.
I am glad I made the step up to all-grain brewing it is challenging and the rewards are huge. I never thought brewing beer could be as much fun as drinking it. Now I suspect that my fairly basic kit will not do me for long - I am already starting to wish I had better equipment mostly on the packaging side, kegs and gas etc.

Although as long as I, my family and friends like the beer I will be happy and one day if I get a better reaction than a gallic shrug from my mentor then it will have been worth it

Monday, March 7, 2011

I couldn't wait for tomorrow!

Tomorrow Tuesday 8th March sees the official launch of Metalman Pale Ale in Waterford. I was really looking forward to it with the result that when Mrs Ciddytourist had to call in to her mother for a few minutes last Friday, I took the opportunity to nip around the corner to Revolution Gastro Bar where the launch is on to try a pint.
It wasn't the ideal time because I have a head cold and my taste buds which are not the best anyway were very muted.
First off I was surprised to see Metalman PA listed as a World Beer along with some of the O'Haras offerings but not Dungarvan Brewing Companys beers which are also sold here.
The beer itself was light golden in colour and sparkling, looks a real thirst-quencher but for me served was too cold - lager temperature (an issue I have had in this pub before with other ales, but at least now they have a few beers that are not kept in fridges). My first taste was of an intensely bitter beer with no hop taste or aroma to mitigate the bitterness which was partly due to my cold I am sure. I expected a citrussy balance to the bitterness due to the cascade and amarillo hop profile but this did not become apparent until the beer warmed up a bit and even then seemed under stated. All in all I enjoyed my first pint of Metalman and I am relishing the prospect of a few more pints tomorrow night at the launch even though my cold is not fully gone away.

Tim and Grainne have obviously put a lot of time, effort and money in to their product already and I wish them the very best of luck.

After all improving the choice for beer drinkers in Waterford is a noble calling!

Monday, February 14, 2011

My First Beer Festival

I attended my first Beer festival last weekend - The Winter Ale and Cask Ale Festival at The Franciscan Well Brewpub in Cork.
First up we (I was accompanied by another Ciddytourist)  had a pint of Jule Ol from White Gypsy brewery. A  6.5% winter warmer scandinavian style beer and it tastes like it. At this point we decided that discretion was the better part of valor and if we kept drinking pints of strong ale we would not get to try all the beers available. There followed a quick succession of ales, porters and stouts - I tried to leave the hoppier beers until later so as not to ruin my palate. I shouldn't have bothered my palate was drunk by about 5pm.
There were some stand-out beers for me:
Raven Vintage Stout - Oak-aged Imperial stout blended with a young stout, even the froth had more flavour than most beers
Purgatory Pale Ale - Lovely hoppy zesty flavour
Messrs Maguire Brown Ale - Malty sweetness that made your hand stick to the glass but balanced
3 Kings Smoked Ale - think sod of turf in a glass, surprisingly tasty

There were also some interesting descriptors used , my favourite being from  John: I said that Hilden brewerys Cathedral Quarter tasted a bit cardboardy and he took a sip and said  "No! It tastes like old library books" and you know he was right and it wasn't a bad taste just a dusty taste.

All in all I enjoyed my first visit to a beer festival and it was nice to meet some of  the brewers (Melissa of Messrs Maguires has promised to have the next beer launch at the weekend so those down the country can attend) and to put some faces to names that I have become familiar with over on Beoir.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Not so small stout after all!

Update! A colleague asked me for some beer samples to show students how to test for alcohol levels a while back and I gave her some of my stout and wheat beers.
The stout was tested this week and the results were surprising. The ABV came in at between 4.8 and 5%. The two separate samples tested came in at 4.99% but a Budweiser sample tested on the same Gas Chromatograph came in a bit higher than the expected 4.3% so with a slight percentage adjustment to allow for this my stout is at least the 4.8%.
The only way I can account for this is that I took the Original Gravity reading before the fermentables were fully mixed in to the wort as it read only 1.032 and my final gravity was 1.010 (after 2 weeks) giving an ABV of less than 3%
Anyway the upshot of this is that my beer is way stronger than I thought and I'll have to be more respectful of drinking it. And of course I have learned another brewing lesson.

Cheers!

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Small stout

Last year my love of good beer was reawakened when I tried some of the Dungarvan Brewing Company's products and realised that I did not have to wait until I was abroad to taste good beer. My journey through craft beer since has been a steep learning curve, I didn't realise there were so many craft beers produced in Ireland, knowing of only a couple of brew pubs that were a long way from my home.

As a consequence of all this taste-full beer I took up home brewing last year and have done 3 brews now. These have all been kits although the last 2 were slightly tweaked in that instead of the kit and kilo of sugar I used a mixture of brewing sugar and dry malt extract. My next project is a 3 kilo kit IPA (so no extra sugars required) which will be dry-hopped with East Kent Goldings when fermented.
All these beers have been well received although the lager and wheat beers have not inspired me. However I made a stout tweaked with dark dry malt extract and brewing sugar ( a little light in fermentables hence the name "Small Stout") and I have to say it tastes great. It is 3 and a half months in the bottle now and it just gets better as it ages. It had a sharp bitterness that has mellowed out to a smooth roasty bitterness that I find really pleasing. I am chuffed to find that I have made a beer that I really like and have passed a bottle on to a proper brewer to see what he thinks.
Hopefully I have not been deluding myself. I'll keep you posted!

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Tourists don't come to Kill

My fellow Ciddytourists didn't make it for the quiz on Friday night so our reputation is untarnished as I think we would have fared poorly with the amount of GAA questions asked on the night. I was teamed with a couple of women from Dunabrattin - a remote place where knowledge has not arrived yet apparently. My worst finish ever in a table quiz in about tenth spot.

I have a friend over from the US and I brought him out for a few Dungarvan Brewery beers this lunchtime. We had Black Rock and Helvick Gold. I am afraid he still prefers Guinness but I live in hope.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Tourists come to Kill

Don't panic! I live in a place called Kill, its a village in County Waterford, Ireland.

My fellow members of the Ciddytours Quiz Team are visiting next weekend to take part in a charity table quiz in my local pub. We are generally quite good and have even won one but I am not holding out much hope this time as the lads are coming to my house to try my latest two home brews: Humdinger - a wheat beer and Small Stout - a low ABV Irish stout. These are both tweaked kit beers as I only started brewing a few months ago and want to get the basics down pat before stepping up to extract or all grain brewing.

I had a few of each over Christmas and thought the stout was lovely, a dark roasty flavour with a dry finish and the wheat beer while a bit young was tasty if a little understated in its flavour. I guess I should go now and do some "quality control". I'll keep you posted with the results - of the quiz and the tastings!

Cheers!

LLF