Rhubarb apple cider

Rhubarb apple cider
1 lb table sugar and 1 lb brown sugar
 
Mixed it with 3.5 lbs thawed frozen rhubarb from this spring. Let it sit over night to pull the rhubarbiness out 
Strained it all out and rinsed with the apple juice. 
Dumped all the liquid (2 1/2 gallons total juice) into my 3 gallon Carboy along with 1 packet of US 04 yeast. 
Airlock it, and we let it go. I’ll take a look in a month. 

Building my Porter

Porter. Stout. Brown. Which is it? Its one of those “I know one when I taste one” Be beer snobby all you want, I don’t care. I know better.
 
If you wanna call it a Porter go ahead, it will fit into that category somewhere. One of the descriptions says it basically lets the brewer decide the characteristics.
I really do like the “know one when I taste one” line because I think in every Porter drinkers mind, they have a certain taste that makes a Porter stand out.
 
Recently the kind of Porter I came to know and love has been scarce, maybe even extinct. Today the Porter is more or less regulated to a base beer for spicing or fruiting. It seems every style is heading down that path now that Craft Beer is on every corner. Can’t be happy with a good solid beer any more, its gotta stand out.
 
All right enough of the blabbering.. What I wanna do here is make that good solid Porter that I cannot find any more. In my head, a Porter is roasty, but not like your modern dry stout. More like black patenty roasty but less ashtray. Sweet, but not like a Brown sweet. Enough to cut the roasty. Hopping is where I think most Porters of today fail. They either are so low hopped that they feel sweet, or shoot up over the top into American Dark Ale territory. A body thats there, but not distractingly full. Medium/rare like.
 
Here is what I came up with:
 
Iron Porter – 5 Gallon  To be bottled
6%
47 IBU
 
9 lbs 2 row
12 oz choc malt
4 oz black patent
1 oz roast barley  (really, I dont know why I leave this in)
8 oz 80L crystal
1 oz centennial @60
1 oz Williamette @10
 
mash 152 and 05 yeast
 
I have gotten away from bottling my Stouts and I feel I’ve lost part of an experience. This, particular recipe shall always be bottled.
 
 

Disruptor

We got started on the Disruptor Imperial stout early in the morning. Well before 7 anyway. 

A lot of grain means a lot of water. In fact more than my measure stick has marks, but I made my best guess. 
I didn’t wanna sit there for an hour waiting for 6.5 gallons to heat so we busted out a Heatstick to help it along. 

Really makes a big difference. I woulda used both but only have the one GFI out here. 
We missed our preboil though. Supposed to be .082 and I only hit .075. Maybe over guessed the water? Maybe. But I know I don’t get nearly the efficiency with the big cooler as I do with the round one. Plus this big of a grain bill for batch sparge doesn’t help.
But not really that far off. 
Really suprised that this sucker isn’t darker than dark. It’s black and all, but I dunno. 
But any way. Here ’tis
Disruptor stout
17 lbs 2 row
1.5 lb roast barley 
1 lb special B
.75 chocolate malt
.5 lb carapils
2 oz chinook @60
2 oz East Kent @30
1 fresh racked Windsor yeast cake from a bitter
Now be careful with this. At time of writing I am 2.5 hours after pitching a 5.5 gallon batch into an 8 gallon bucket. And already blowing over
The Windsor cake is furious!
I can’t wait for this one