Postings tagged with brewing
My Wynkoop Brewery tour
On September 29th, I got some time away during a wedding weekend in Denver to do a tour of the Wynkoop Brewery, “Denver’s first brewpub.”
Craig and Waldo (two junior brewers) were kind enough to give my daughter Arden and myself a look around the inner workings of the brewery. Unfortunately, I didn’t have a camera with me. . . so no pictures.
First impressions – the food is excellent – as is the beer. I had an IPA, a pilsner and and amber, I believe. All of them impressed me greatly. Unfortunately I had these libations right before the tour – so perhaps I didn’t pick up all the details I could’ve. Hey – sometimes you have a choice between documenting or enjoying an experience.
They have a 30 barrel system – with very little automation. As Craig said “we’re basically homebrewing on a 30 barrel scale.” A system tipped towards manual management didn’t hurt the quality of their beers a bit.
They use old milk tanks for their mash tuns, boiling kettles and fermenters. Their boiling kettles are in the same room as their fermenters – so they have real problems with heat control. Apparently all the relevant tanks have glycol systems installed.
Craig and Waldo both started as homebrewers. The tour was more of a conversation than a one-way “this is how we do it” kinda thing. The quality and openness of the tour reflected very nicely on the laid-back atmosphere of the brewpub.
I don’t have much else to say except that the beer is excellent, the atmosphere inviting and the food a couple steps above typical brewpub fare. Absolutely worth a side trip when in the Denver area.
Coffee Imperial Stout Recipe
- 11 lbs. dry amber malt extract
- 1/2 lb. chocolate malt
- 1/2 lb. roasted barley
- 5 oz. Northern Brewer – boiling
- 2 oz. Cascade – finishing
- 1/4 tsp. Irish Moss
- 1 quart double-strength french press dark-roasted coffee in the secondary fermenter.
Bring two gallons of water up to 150 degrees. Steep grains a half hour. Remove. Add malt extract and boiling hops – boil vigorously for an hour. Be careful! This wort is very likely to boil over when you’re not looking.
Add finishing hops and Irish Moss, boil 15 more minutes. Sparge into 3 gallons of cold water, top up to 5 gallons if necessary. Primary ferment and rack to the secondary, adding the hot double-strength coffee. The temperature shouldn’t rise appreciably from the quart of coffee you add. Give it a few days in the secondary and bottle as usual. This beer can stand up to age – and I wouldn’t touch it until at least a month in the bottle.
If you don’t use hop bags, now is the time to start. Nobody wants to scoop and sparge 7 ounces of hops.
Notes
Coffee Imperial Stout. This beer was one of my entries (along with Maple Brown Ale) in the Sam Adams “LongShot” contest. I didn’t win. Sob. But both beers are well worth the effort, especially this one. Malty, smooth, a bit of a residual bitterness from the coffee and a bunch of interesting flavors. Nice. This one leaves a taste on your lips.
I used Ethiopian coffee from my client Dean’s Beans at a full city+ roast. You could probably get away with any darker-roast coffee, but do use the good stuff. You’re already spending $45+ on the malt and hops, don’t skimp on the finisher – good coffee.
I think it’s important to add the coffee to the secondary fermenter, as boiling coffee is a great way to lose a lot of the flavor notes it contains. The coffee oils probably interfere with head retention. . . but no worries. The head looked fine to me.
This is an excellent beer – I know I’ll be brewing it again.
Vermont Maple Brown Ale
My second beer – a brown ale with a twist, based loosely on Charles Papazian’s “Dithrambic Brown Ale” from “The New Complete Joy of Home Brewing”.
The twist? Maple syrup and some tweaking of the hops.
Vermont Maple Brown Ale
Ingredients for 5 gallons.
- 3.3 lbs Munton & Fison unhopped dark malt
- 3.3 lbs Munton & Fison unhopped light malt
- .5 lb roasted barley
- .25 lb black patent
- 1.75 oz Progress hops – boiling
- 1 oz Cascade – finishing
- .5 gal Maple Syrup – I used grade A Amber.
Throw the cracked grains in 1.5 gallons cold water. Bring to a boil, removing the grains after a couple minutes.
Stir in the maple syrup, both cans of malt and the boiling hops. Boil for 45 minutes. Add the Cascade in the last couple minutes of the boil.
Put 2 to 3 gallons of cold water into a clean fermenter, sparge off the wort and top up to 5 gallons. Pitch yeast when cool enough.
Again, I probably should’ve taken gravity readings. Gimme a break! I’m back at the game after nearly 10 years. I’ll get anal soon enough.
My goal for this beer is to make a smooth malty brown with a light hoppiness and complexity hopefully improved upon by the maple syrup and roasted barley.
Brewing - again.
So – I’ve decided to start brewing again. I’ve got all the equipment sitting fallow in the basement and – as I recall from the early 90’s – it made me very happy to brew beer.
Then I graduated college, moved around a lot and ran out of free time. Now I’ve got a house, a bit more free time and a need to brew. So, back again!
My first batch after nearly 10 years away from the hobby:
Strong-like-bull IPA
Ingredients for 4 gallons of beer.
- 6.6lbs Munton & Fison Amber Unhopped Malt
- 1lb Crystal malt
- 1oz Chinook hops – boiling
- 1oz Cascade hops – finishing
- 2oz Oak chips
- .5oz Cascade – dry hop
Bring 1.5 gallons to a boil and remove from heat. Throw in the cracked grains, steep for a half hour and discard.
Dump in the malt, boiling hops and boil for 45 minutes. Toss in the Cascade for the last couple minutes.
Sanitize the oak chips by steaming for a few minutes.
Put two gallons of cold water in a sanitized fermenter, along with the sanitized oak chips. Sparge in the wort and top off to 4 gallons total. Prep and pitch your yeast at the right temp per the usual.
When the primary fermentation has died down, siphon carefully off to a clean secondary fermenter containing the .5 oz Cascade for dry hopping. Let the brew sit for a week or two in the secondary – there should be no fermentation evident.
Bottle. Enjoy!
It’s still early in this beer’s life, but the preliminary results are very promising – malty, hoppy with nary an off flavor. Probably should’ve taken some gravity readings. . . But heck. I didn’t.
I wanted to make a stronger version of an IPA because I’ve been drinking Otter Creek’s 15th Anniversary IPA and it’s just about the best beer ever. Buy it with impunity.
