T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1046.1 | | ASDG::IDE | My mind's lost in a household fog. | Fri Apr 12 1996 15:46 | 29 |
1046.2 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Apr 15 1996 10:11 | 11 |
1046.3 | | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | Mr. Plumber's coding services | Tue Apr 16 1996 10:36 | 20 |
1046.4 | | REDZIN::COX | | Wed Apr 17 1996 17:13 | 27 |
1046.5 | | SCAMP::FORTIN_C | Worked the Bars & Sideshows.... | Fri Apr 26 1996 16:11 | 32 |
1046.6 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Apr 29 1996 18:04 | 7 |
1046.7 | Honey-Primed Bottles | SCAMP::FORTIN_C | Worked the Bars & Sideshows.... | Wed May 22 1996 16:43 | 16 |
1046.8 | Fruity questions | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | regnaD kciN, my hero | Tue Mar 18 1997 11:18 | 27 |
| I've got some blueberries in the freezer and I want to put them to good
use, so I was considering a beer something like -
6 - 7 lbs light malt extract (either dried or liquid)
3 lbs honey
3/4 - 1 lb Crystal malt (20L)
.5 oz saaz pellets boil
.5 oz saaz pellets finish
(I'm open to other hop suggestions)
1 - 2 lbs blueberries
dried ale yeast (have a package of Nottingham in the fridge)
My questions mainly have to do with the berries -
1. They are frozen. From what I've read I was going to thaw them out, and
put them in the wort (juice and all?) after boiling, while the temp is
around 180. Rack the whole mess into the primary when cool and pitch
the yeast at the appropriate temperature. Does this sound right?
2. Do I squish the berries up prior to putting them in the wort?
3. How long do I leave it in the primary?
Any other suggestions?
Dan
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1046.9 | | DECWET::KOWALSKI | Time's not for saving | Tue Mar 18 1997 11:35 | 28 |
| I would add the berries to the secondary rather than
into the wort because adding to the wort will blow
off most of the berry
aroma during fermentation. Since they're frozen,
their cell structure is sufficiently disrupted that
you don't have to mash them up at all. I wouldn't
worry about sanitizing them but you could steep
them in 180 water before you add them to the secondary.
But basically the ale is so acidic at that point and
the yeast concentration is so high, there's not much
chance that another bug could seriously disrupt
things. So you could just dump them in the secondary
straight from the freezer.
Your amount of fruit is a little low to do much more
than add color. Last summer, I used 12 pounds of
raspberries in a 5 gallon batch and 7 pounds of
sour cherries in another. Both had OG of 1040
before the fruit additions to the secondary. They
turned out well, with excellent color, good fruit flavor,
and adequate aroma. So don't expect too much with 2 pounds
of blueberries (especially with the moderately high
gravity and aroma hops you have planned). Low
bitterness is appropriate for the style, as your
recipe indicates.
Hope that helps!
Mark
|
1046.10 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Wed Mar 19 1997 10:02 | 18 |
| well, I kinda disagree with Mark a little....I made several fruit beers
from ales to stouts awhile ago, the recipes are all in here somewhere.
I think ya got just about the right amount of blue berries for color and
falvor...granted, I *DON'T* like over powered fruit beers, so a little
goes a long way with me, so you might want to add more if you are
really into fruit in a brew. FOr some of my brews, I would buy the 2 lb
bag of frozen berrires in the Super MArket cause it was easy.
I would do the beer (although I'd make a
darker beer for blueberries) after the final 2 min boil of the
finishing hops, remove the pot from the heat, throw in the thawed bag of
berries (Mark's right in saying the berries can be thrown right in
cause they were frozen) and steep for 30 mins. I'd remove as much of
the spent fruit as I could before adding the wort to my carbouy half
filled with water...to each his own,,,it ain't rocket science unless ya
want it to be....
deadhead
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1046.11 | Blueberry Beer | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Any day now.... | Tue Apr 22 1997 12:50 | 28 |
| Finally brewed the batch -
6 lbs light malt extract
3 lbs honey
1 lb 20l crystal malt
2 oz malto dextrin (left over from a previous recipe)
1 1/2 oz Spalt hop pellets, 40 min
1/2 oz Spalt pellets, 10 min
approx 1 1/2 lbs blueberries (frozen)
Nottingham ale yeast - dry
OG - 1.058
Did the usual and added the berries after I removed the pot from the
stove and it had cooled to about 180.
Let it cool, poured it all (unstrained) into the primary with cool
water and brought it up to 5 gals. Pitched the yeast.
Little bit of activity Monday am (brewed late Sunday evening). Lots of
activity last night, and this morning it looks like a blender was
dropped in the carboy.
I plan on adding another 2 lbs of berries when I rack to the secondary.
Should be interesting.
Dan
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