2015

Happy New Year!

I was gonna brew today, but I decided to drink up some of 2014’s brews:
Harbor Lights Brown
Iron porter
Apple Cranberry Cider (oh did this change for the better,, wow)

Got a busy brew schedule the next couple of months so stay right here.

Mini Dubbel and stout. New filter.

I found time to get a couple of brews in before the end of the year. 

I had to get the last of the TMNT beers in, so last weekend Donatello hit the kettle. Not my first Belgian, but the first with the T-58 yeast. And yet another mini batch. 
Donatello the Dubbel.
5.5 lbs pale malt
4 oz aromatic 
4 oz special B
8 oz melenoiden 
1 lb dark candi sugar
1/2 oz willamette 60
1/4 oz willamette 30
T-58 yeast mashed 152
First time actually using the fermentation chamber. Got it set at 61. Everything looks good so far. Smells Belgiany in there. Far far better than the last Belgian.
And the second brew was yesterday. I started out making a dry stout. Yep another mini batch.  
I had some extra grain left over so I threw them in as well. An extra 1.25 lbs in a 3 gallon batch is quite a bit. So decided to also bump the hops as well and turn this into an American Stout. 
This smelled Sooo good. Wanted to crawl right in there. 
Nebula. Mini batch
4.75 pale malt
.5 lb Munich malt
.5 lb roast barley
.5 lb flaked barley
1 oz willamette 60
.5 oz cascade 60
.25 oz willamette 10
.5 oz cascade 10
05 yeast and mashed high 158
Pulled a .062 OG.
This was also the test run for the new water filter we put together. 
Can’t wait to see the results. 

End of year Part 2- mostly procrastination

There is always something I wanna do at the brewery. Ideas come and go. But a lot of them just don't fit in with either my style, my philosophy, my capability, or my budget. And of course I've had a few things come and go this year.
As far as my process goes I like it just fine. Its more of a hands on approach. But that only means I hand dump a bucket or two. There have been those that argue an automated system makes better beer. But at this volume of brewing I have yet to see that as fact.
But none the less, there are things that I have wanted to try or a direction I wanted to start going.
One of the things I have been talking about doing most is moving to 3 gallon batches. Most wanna go 10 or even 20 gallon batches. So me wanting to go smaller seems odd to some. But I can brew more, have more variety, and an experiment gone wrong wont break the bank.
Mini batches for me is more than just cutting recipes in half. Its going electric, its moving to all indoors, its being able to take the brewing system on the road,  its re-opening the bottling line, its all kinds of things.
This year I got further along. I built the two heat sticks to see how I liked the electrics and to decide if rewiring the basement was worth it. I must say I was pretty impressed with the power of two 110 elements.
But while I have been utilizing the sticks, I have yet to move electrical boxes to more practical locations or installed elements to the kettle its self. (But the reason for not having kettle elements will be coming up later.) I am currently assessing the electrical issues and probably will be moving the outlets in the near future, along with a new sink and drain location.
The next thing that I wanted, that actually happened this year, was a fermentation chamber. It was more that my bad luck turned into good luck. My garage has a tendency to kill fridges because we all know my garage is famous for being like 300 degrees. And yep, the fridge died. But in a good way. The thermostat went out and it pretty much turned into a standing freezer.
An STC-1000 temp controller later and we have a heated and cooled ferment chamber. I have used this quite a few times this year all ready. But sadly not for lagering. If you had read the last post, you have seen there were many other things I was worrying about.  But the chamber is all set, the basement is moving twards being too cold for most other brewing, so lagers are in the immediate future.
The other bigger thing I wanted to happen in the brewery again had to do with electric brewing,, but only indirectly. If I had installed the elements into either of my kettles I would have had to come up with a different way to cool. The immersion chiller would not work because the elements would then be in the way. I needed to figure on a counter flow.
I picked up a counterflow from a club member, who didn't like it because he didn't like the gravity feed. I had a small pump I bought a few years ago just for this. http://youtu.be/AYGZa4Bqwls just felt like it was a lot of screwing around with wires and switches. Bleh.  But with my new pseudo tiered system the gravity feed shouldn't be bad at all. My kettle is a good 30 inches off the ground. Plenty of height. I just need to get one more fitting and we are good to go. If this works as well as I hope, my next step would be to pick one of the far smaller plate chillers.
Looking ahead to 2015 I see a few changes coming. Finish these few things I just talked about for sure. Then we can move to getting the brew schedule to the way I had been planning for a while now. Bigger 10 gallon batches of lower ABV “house beers” to keep on tap. But focusing on the mini batches.
As far as styles go for 2015, I'd like to get back to being the Stoutmaster, of the club as there is some serious competition in this style again. And possibly browns. There just don't seem to be any good browns anymore.
Thanks for reading this year.