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Hoffman Amps Forum image Author Topic: Any Brewers, Wine makers or distillers here?  (Read 46664 times)

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Offline boots

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Re: Any Brewers, Wine makers or distillers here?
« Reply #50 on: December 27, 2015, 09:30:03 am »
I am a beer brewer also.  Seems that a lot of us DIY types have the same hobbies! 

I stick to my usual seat of the pants approach to making pale ales and IPA's.  I gave up following recipes once I figured out what works well for my own tastes.

I just made my first batches this fall using my own home-grown Nugget hops.  (Gardening is another of my hobbies).

Offline murrayatuptown

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Re: Any Brewers, Wine makers or distillers here?
« Reply #51 on: May 09, 2020, 07:27:56 pm »
Wow, no activity in 5 years...

I have only done 1 gallon beer kits, but bought my first 5 gallon kit, which is my first LME kit instead of DME...all new equipment too.

Detoured from brewing to make some vodka infusions with commercial vodka...trying to recreate a Polish Cytrynòwka lemon vodka I had in Krakow, Poland...pretty scarce in the US.

Ordered 10 # of large Meyer lemons from US Citrus in Texas and bought 3.5 L of Swedish (Ravo) vodka. Ended up buying a 3rd 1.75 L bottle and I'm glad I got a 12-pack of 32 oz. Mason jars because 10# of lemons is a lot...5# was only 5$ more than 2# and 10# was only 5$ more than 5#, and shipping was the same for 2, 5 or 10#.

Kind of panicked about 2 AM after starting the project at 9 PM, but whatta ya do but finish?

Made lemon & honey Polish infusion, unsweetened pomegranate, unsweetened pomegranate+pink grapefruit, and a hibiscus batch that was too sour...added honey; tasted like cough syrup. Set aside and came back to blend 50/50 hibiscus/honey & the Cytrynòwka (lemon& honey)...that was good...and a good rescue.

Been trading it for hand-made face masks & shared more than I wanted until the reviews were all thumbs-up...then I thought I better save some!

The 5 gallon beer kit is an Adventure-in-Homebrewing clone of a ca. 1890 Zywiec Porter. One of the first Baltic Porters. Over 10% A.B.V., should probably be called an Imperial Porter. I ordered a 1% alcohol boost and yeast fuel because my last stout 'stalled' in fermentation. I got spooked by a reviewer from Poland saying the beer tasted like soup, which raised a lot of questions. Adding cocoa nibs & possibly espresso...TBD. doubling the yeast and going to give it three months in secondary...not rushing it.
Murray

Offline echuta13

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Re: Any Brewers, Wine makers or distillers here?
« Reply #52 on: August 30, 2021, 12:34:42 am »
I'll give this corpse a kick for old times sake. I think I've been home-brewing for about 7 years now?  I generally tend towards English styles (bitter, dark mild, porter, etc...), but I like to make the occasional hoppy pale, saison, or dunkel weisse as well.
I usually do small batches (around 2 gallons) as I really don't drink that much and it takes some time to go through them, but I try to have 2-3 different beers on tap if I can help it (the lady of the house like her beers dark).  I made an oaked cherry cider not too long ago that was really easy and came out stunning for a first time cider brew.   

I've been brewing much more of late as my work bench is a hot mess and I haven't found the motivation to clear the debris (yet).    :icon_biggrin:

"When choosing between two evils I always like to try the one I've never tried before."

Offline murrayatuptown

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Re: Any Brewers, Wine makers or distillers here?
« Reply #53 on: July 30, 2022, 05:21:34 pm »
My lager yeast Baltic Porter came out at 12.34% ABV after some choices and a mistake-correction of another mistake. Too high for 'style rules' and it was very stubborn about bottle carbonating probably because the alcohol was too high for the yeast to continue working on their 2nd shift. Kegs are another level of procedure and less portable (harder to share off-site).

It was excellent for about 6 months then I wasn't enjoying it anymore.

Some time we are going to repeat it, but buy a small electric pump. The manual labor for 51 bottles (0.33 liter to 12 oz.) was unpleasant. Going to try cask & keg yeast for high gravity batch carbonation that will work. Probably will not use the +1% boost and not accidentally use 10% extra liquid malt extract (took me too long to get started with the kit and it had gotten moldy...hasty shopping Sunday AM at only open supplier to replace it I had to get 3.3 # (1.5 kg) tubs instead of 3#. Maybe try to keep the ABV down to 9.5 - 10.5% & hope fully finishing the conditioning allows it to store longer. It was basically an Imperial Stout with lager yeast...Stouts store well if made well. There are a lot of places to screw up so I can't complain about the variety of success we got with first 5-gallon attempt.

If I want 4-8% brew, I'll happily buy locally-brewed stuff to explore, learn & support.

When I see the kind of things I am interested in going for $4-6 a bottle in stores, I figure it's worth the work to make my own crazy idea stuff.

I found a beer I liked that was made into a clone kit, and it did cost the same per bottle (not counting labor). That beer I buy as six-packs...no questions, no looking back.

Pretentious labels are another place to spend/waste time fussing over...one of the few places pretentiousness is tolerated & encouraged.



Going to go with 0.5 liter (16.9 oz). ale bottles because someone got me a deal on them...reduce the number of bottles to fill and just sanitize & use. I'm done de-labeling, cleaning and sanitizing saved bottles...that was one of the worst parts timewise.
Murray

Offline ShoemanGB

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Re: Any Brewers, Wine makers or distillers here?
« Reply #54 on: July 31, 2022, 07:20:49 am »

If I want 4-8% brew, I'll happily buy locally-brewed stuff to explore, learn & support.

When I see the kind of things I am interested in going for $4-6 a bottle in stores, I figure it's worth the work to make my own crazy idea stuff.

I found a beer I liked that was made into a clone kit, and it did cost the same per bottle (not counting labor). That beer I buy as six-packs...no questions, no looking back.

Going to go with 0.5 liter (16.9 oz). ale bottles because someone got me a deal on them...reduce the number of bottles to fill and just sanitize & use. I'm done de-labeling, cleaning and sanitizing saved bottles...that was one of the worst parts timewise.

All true.  Back in the late '80's through mid '90's I was seriously into homebrewing. It was a much smaller market  then with few retail outlets for supplies.  It was fun and rewarding and a lot of work.  That was the time of the first micro-brewery boom.  It wasn't called craft beer back in those days.   Being in a college town, there was a brewing club headed by a professor visiting from England where he had brewed for many years, so we had some good advice available. The goals back then were good porters and stouts, real lagers were virtually impossible due to the refrigeration requirements.  Top fermenting ale yeast, dry, was all we could get. Munton and Fison was the primary source for most all ingredients. Eventually liquid yeasts did arrive and that was great.  By then I was repitching the good stuff I had found as I was brewing weekly anyways. 
  Bottles were a pain, eventually I had cases of them prepped and in their own cases, Tuborg used to come in 12 bottle hard cases with flip open lids and that was the source. I produced enough at the peak that i didn't buy a commercial beer other than trying a new import or domestic micro start up for about three years.  Eventually the bottles were for small batch specials, and 5 connie kegs were in rotation in a fridge with two taps in the door.
  The cost was much cheaper than buying equivelant volume of imports in the styles we made.  I happened to be in a local store the other day that sells supplies and man, has the costs gone way up!  The gear is much nicer and he kit options are pretty sweet, but it does not look like a hobby that also paid a benefit in cost savings like it used to!
  Eventually in the quest for a better beer I ditched extracts and went to full grain brewing.  That combined with the new liquid yeasts sure did provide that result.  By then I also had my process and gear well refined. It was mostly DIY on that front too.   The flavor was far superior. Maybe now the extract taste has been worked out and removed but back then you could always tell when the beer had started as a can of malt.    But after awhile spending maybe 6 or more hours on a brew day got old, and good micro's had flooded the shelf so I quit and have not been back. 
 We had (have still) Geary's two hours south in Portland, where Alan Pugsley had been a huge kickstarter of the craft industry in this part of the country, and Greg Noonan's Vermont Pub and Brewery in Burlington where my brother lived and we visited often.  Noonan was an early author and authority on the subject. I still have that book somewhere. Jim Koch started Samuel Adams in Boston and that quickly got distribution up here.
 This was pre-internet of course, so books and the magazine Zymurgy from the AHA were our primary sources. I still have my old AHA member card too, probably a very low member number :icon_biggrin:   Charlie Papazian was our idol and I had both of his books as well.   Then the big corporate brewers swooped in and bought up a lot of the new guys, faked their own micro's with what they called pilot breweries and generally ruined the scene.
  Now we've been in a second boom and I think it's here to stay and I'm glad. The craft guys products are often outstanding and we have two beverage stores in town now that have huge selections of locals and regionals along with the big dogs.  So a beer connoisseur's life is good now.   
  Man, that was a ot longer than I had thought...sorry about that. Now please excuse me, I have a King of Tone board to finish populating today :laugh:

Offline echuta13

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Re: Any Brewers, Wine makers or distillers here?
« Reply #55 on: September 07, 2022, 11:18:19 am »
I don't have the time to brew like I used to between work, family, house projects, and way too many other hobbies!  :huh:
I'm only brewing 2 gallon batches at this point as it takes me a spell to go through even that (plus I like to keep at least two brews on tap).   Currently a saison (around 7%), and a dunkel weizenbock coming in around 8% are on tap (the wife prefers her beers dark like her soul).

I've gotten away from bottling for the most part.  Kegging is just way too convenient and I'm super lazy.  I haven't done too many BIG beers of late, but if I were... definitely would need to bottle.  I usually go for the bomber bottles as I don't have the patient for anything smaller. 

I'd like to do an imperial stout again at some point, but my last one took about 6 months of aging before it was about right.  I bought a small 1 gallon oak barrel so I'm thinking of aging a portion on oak for a few months, blend and bottle to age for about a year. 


"When choosing between two evils I always like to try the one I've never tried before."

 


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