Fresh hop

Need to get back brewing soon. Its been a long hot summer. Too hot brew really. But have a few events that I usually brew for coming up.
Halloween. Used to brew big ass beers for this. Imperial Stouts, Double this or that, but tradition is changing it a bit. I have been going with a wet hopped for the ol’ garage concert of Halloween.
I usually get enough of the back yard Mt Hood hops to end up with about a pound or more dried. Which sounds great! But the amount of work involved no where near makes it appealing to me any more. Picking, finding drying space, packaging… bleh. No more.
What I do now for the wet hopped now is pretty straight forward. Take whatever recipe I plan to use and add more water to it. Like alot more. And figure to use your regular bittering hop and mid boil hopping. Your fresh hops will all be going in at the last minute.

I pick as many hops as I can during water heating, mashing, and boil. Then right at the last minute of boil I put them in my big mesh bag and put them in. Flame out, and let them sit for 15 min. Then start cooling.
I usually get around a 5 gallon buckets picked in that time. And I have also found that picking during the brew is better. With the wet hopping, all your really trying to get is some flavor and a lot of aroma.  But when I used to pick them before I brewed, every time you walked by them you could keep smelling them as they were losing their potency.
Plus is sound better when you say the hops in there are 5 minutes old.
Back to the water. I know some people (Tim) dont like guessing at volumes,, but when you are adding more water to the boil to accommodate the amount of water these hops are going to soak up, you pretty much have to. And its a lot. 1-2 gallons a lot. I dont have much advice here as I do it by feel, but the of course the drier the hops appear to be, the more water you’ll need.
And yes I tried adding my water after the hops have soaked up, but then you really should re heat back up to sterilize. And again,, while doing this, you can almost see those volatile aromas burning off.  
A word on the beer its self. I personally have found that these wet hopped beers taste profile change greatly in a short amount of time. At first the aromas will be up in ya and cover everything else up. But within a few weeks those aromas start to dissipate leaving the tastes behind. And remember there was a 5 gallons of hop taste put in there.
(And while have no proof,, it feels like they dissipate way faster than pelleted hops.)
I would assume each hop variety would vary in the long term taste that that amount leave behind, but I have only ever used just mine, and my Mt Hoods seem to break down into almost a maraschino cherry flavor during long term storage.
So get your wet hopped beer plans ready,, and make sure to drink it now, but save some for different stages of age.


Vacation brews

Haven’t had 3 fermenters going at the same time in a while. But being on vacation, having empty kegs and perfect weather made brewing almost necessary.

First brew was just a warm up. A little 3 gallon pale ale using the 7Cs hops that I won at the club Xmas party.  Nothing spectacular about this one just getting the rythem down.

Mini Pale- 3 gallon OG:1.048  IBU 38
4 lbs- Pale Malt
1 Pilsner
8 oz crystal 40
1 oz Willamette @ 60
1 oz 7Cs @ 1 min
151 mash and US05 yeast

I would have just used all 2 row but I only had 4 lbs so I threw in the 1 extra lb of pils I had sitting there. Otherwise, just an everyday pale ale.

Now the next beer had a little more thought to it. Needed to brew a session beer for our upcoming homebrew contest. Must be 1.040 or less. Not being sure if I needed to stay within style or not I figured I better just to be safe.
I’m kinda guessing there will be quite a few blondes and common bitters entered, so I decided to get on the absolute low end of an English brown ale.
I dug thru all my recipes and came up with a combination of a few.

Hand of Doom – Brown ale- 5 gallon  OG: 1.040  IBU 25
6 lbs Maris Otter
12 oz crystal 80
4 oz chocolate malt
1 oz black patent
.5 oz Willamette @ 60
.5 oz EKG @ 60
.5 oz EKG @ 10
154 mash and Nottingham yeast.

(I would say that looking at this mash I might consider dropping the black patent. as it quite dark, most likely too dark.)

Have been having trouble with Beersmith lately not calculating water right. And it was quite off again. Not sure why its been off as I have not changed anything in the years that I have been using it,, it just suddenly went off.

Volume way under. I added almost a gallon. And then on top of that, I was watching the gravity and had to stop at 45 minutes so I didn’t go over my 1.040. But I think with the raging boil I had it will be good.

And since I am writing this 5 days after the fact, I can comment on the ferment of this one. The Nottingham of today always scares me at first. It took over 24 hours to show any signs of taking off. And then it made just a small 1/4 inch of krausen, for 1 day and that was that.
Not sure why all this stuff decided to go all wrong with this beer,, but hence, the name.

And lastly,, yesterday I brewed the Woot!zenbock. First time doing a full all grain of it.
Woot! is a big ol’ Weiseenbock. 1.090 big. So taking using the yeast cake from the Vienna Lager of a few weeks ago for it. Didn’t change anything other than subbing in all wheat malt for the wheat extract.

Woot!zenbock – 5 gallon  OG:1.090 IBU32
5 lbs Munich malt
8 lbs Wheat malt
3 lbs pilsner
8 oz Special B
8 oz chocolate malt
1 oz perle @ 60
1 oz hallertau @ 15
154 mash  on a S-23 yeast cake

Had to break out the big mash tun for this one.

This beer always smells awesome in the boil. And as expected, it took off almost instantly getting poured on to that full yeast cake. I just wish the weather would have stayed a bit cooler for one more week,, but this yeast strain is pretty good with being in the higher 50 range.

It was a good week brewing. I’ll be back in a few weeks with updates,, including the now bottled Vienna Lager..