What did you brew today?

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OK so it's more of an oud bruin than a flanders red, it sounds delicious though. Keep us updated cos I might give this one a try soon :thumba:
I kegged this the other day. Now that its fermented out its maybe better than I realised, had a sneaky taste after less than 2 days in the keg and its pretty good.
I didn't add the oak the the recipe stipulated.
Things learnt though -
When using probiotics in capsules split them first don't just chuck them in as the casings are slow to dissolve.
Check the PH rather than do it by taste. I was being tight and the commercial sour I had the other night definitely was sour (it was done the same way)
Maybe do a split batch to see what the base beer tastes like.
I used my own hops of unknown quality, however maybe for this style the restrained hopping works so got away with it.
Oh and I broke my unwritten rule of trying a recipe for a beer I've never drunk so no idea how close it got.
 
A week on from brewing my Greg Hughes summer ale with centennial swapped hops and Imperial citrus yeast. Has dropped to 1.012, so 3.8% taste is really good from the fermentor so I'm not going to bother with a dry hop. Will leave in the fermentor for another week then cold crash. Going to try and keep the carbonation on this one on the low side. Looking for something easy drinking but with flavour for the bright summer nights.
 
A Dubble

Grist

5 kg Pale Malt
1.5 kg Munich Malt
1 kg Abbey Malt
100 g Dark Crystal
300 g Demerara
300 g Table Sugar

Hops

Bobek 40g 60 mins
Hallertau 25g 30 mins

Irish Moss 9 g

Mash had pH of 4.7

OG came out at 1.063 which was pretty much on the button

Yeast is Safale Abbye BE-256
 
50 litres of elderflower champagne. Sticking to about 6% so I can have it on tap. I was going to make it 11% then dilute with pop but realised the pop would cost about the same price.

I'm slacking off putting a real beer on. I've got a starter I cultured from a previous brew on the stir plate that's meant to be Fuller's yeast but it clearly isn't so I've ordered some M36 Liberty Bell to try.
 
and bottled 14 litres of Elderflower Champagne.
Did you calculate and do it with priming sugar, or the batshit insane way they tell you in loads of recipes - yeah, just bottle it after... pffft 3 days, I dunno, and then sleep with it in your bed to keep it warm or put it in your dog's bed... something like that. If you find bits of your dog missing then release pressure on the remaining bottles and leave for another day or two. Enjoy!
 
Did you calculate and do it with priming sugar, or the batshit insane way they tell you in loads of recipes - yeah, just bottle it after... pffft 3 days, I dunno, and then sleep with it in your bed to keep it warm or put it in your dog's bed... something like that. If you find bits of your dog missing then release pressure on the remaining bottles and leave for another day or two. Enjoy!
Ha, both times I made it I decided against the bottle-halfway-through-fermentation-and-hope method and primed after complete fermentation. In pop bottles!
 
Did you calculate and do it with priming sugar, or the batshit insane way they tell you in loads of recipes - yeah, just bottle it after... pffft 3 days, I dunno, and then sleep with it in your bed to keep it warm or put it in your dog's bed... something like that. If you find bits of your dog missing then release pressure on the remaining bottles and leave for another day or two. Enjoy!
I did it with brewing sugar 1/4TS per 500ml. I did my last recent batch without sugar and was disappointed with the carbonation and had to open them to add sugar later, not a great way to do it!
 
This morning I brewed what I have called Mr Brookin's Hop Forward IPA, my first use of maris otter as a base grain and otherwise using up hops leftover from my previous diydog punk ipa. 15 litres into the fermenter, I'm planning on priming half the batch with grapefruit juice as a bit of an experiment. It was also my first brew with my new klarstein kettle which made the whole process a lot better than using a stockpot on our hob as before (and no risk of carbon monoxide poisoning). Hit my predicted OG so really pleased.

IMG_20190615_093909.jpg
 
Bottling day - 12 bottles of mixed fruit red wine.
Same starting point split between a GV2 and R1840 yeast. Both finished at 0.996

Used some new plastic foam corks - utter rubbish, and extruded up past the plunger so had to cut that off. Back to proper corks if I can find some good ones.
 
Brewed another rye pale ale
4 kg Minch malt
1 kg rye malt
200 g carapils
200g crystal 80
Flame out hops cascade and sorchi ace 50 g of each
Dry hop will be the same
 
I made up a Wilko Feeling Hoppy triple hopped IPA kit. The first kit to use my fermentation fridge/inkbird setup.
 
I made Feeling Hoppy early this year and pimped it up as follows:
Wilko Feely Hoppy Triple Hopped 1.8kg kit, +H&B malt extract 500ml,+ 1/2 kg Muntons Brew enhancer,+.6kg brew sugar. Brewed to 19 ltrs, kit hops added at day 5. Total production 39 x 500ml Bottled. 6.1% ABV
 
Thanks - it's my first time with this kit and only my second brew, so I decided not to go off-piste with it. I'm happy to say the fermentation looks like it's started... MUST...BE...PATIENT!!! :-)
 
Today's brew is a Belgian IPA with citra, cascade, and columbus. Optimistically hoping for something along the lines of Cloudwater's Belgian Citra.
 
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