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QBrew and brewtarget versions of various recipes.

Clinton

/Cider

See also ClintonEbadi's homebrew page

Mo Hitz Mo Ale

Thoth Strong Stout

Nowruz (نوروز) IPA

Cenunnos Ginger-Chamomile Wheat Ale

'English' IPA

Brown Town Brown Ale

bpt

All-Grain Wassail Ale

Wassail Ale

Brewing notes:

Notes from ClintonEbadi:

French Revolution

SteveKillen

Haystack Black Porter

Fermentation notes:

Luna Moth Saison

Very well received by Eddie & John at the FLHS. Of note: nice distinctive bubblegum aroma, not too heavily spiced, good balance between malt, alcohol, and hops. A keeper! :)

Steve's Extra Special

Wedding American Pale Ale

Bubonic Porter

A minor reformulation of the recipe used for vees's wedding. Needs a bit more mash time than 60 minutes, I think; a couple batches were underattenuated. Delicious!

A 10-gallon scale of the recipe above.

Killen's Irish Red

OG 1.046 @ 69F, 4.5 gals in each fermenter (one US-05. one Wyeast 1728 Scottish Ale). Ferment at 65F. Note: intentionally splashed wort during transfer to kettle rather than siphoning; I'm interested in testing small-batch effects of hot-side aeration.

Stovetop Ales

Best Bitter

Version 1

It turned out pretty well. The molasses took a while to tone down, but it had a nice hop spiciness to it.

Version 2

Second attempt with this recipe, on a slightly bigger kettle. Woo, a half-gallon more beer :) I changed the yeast and played with the hop schedule a bit to compensate for the fruitier yeast profile. More importantly, I tried adding most of the DME near the end of the boil rather than at the beginning.

Yowie, what a difference the late addition makes! Unfortunately, the Fuggles are missed on the palate, but the extra emphasis on the Kent Goldings yields an incredibly quaffable brew. In successive iterations, I'll walk the Fuggles back in.

Northern England Brown Ale

Smokey Amber Ale

Sorghum Ale (gluten-free)

Some notes: A very low krausen during primary fermentation, but research indicates that this is typical. Quite lemony, almost like a hard lemonade at bottling. Delicious after bottle-conditioning! Quite light-bodied, and a pleasant fruitiness in the aftertaste. The lemonyness tones down after several weeks in bottle.

American IPA

Ended up a quart short in the kettle, but gravity was spot on, so the top-up brought it up to the correct volume and gravity. My first full-boil batch on the stove with the new 5-gallon kettle! I racked this onto the sorghum yeast cake. I really need to start washing yeast. The dry-hopping lasted 8 days, and gives a delightful aroma. Fairly light-bodied, but enough to support the hops--a great, easy-drinking summer recipe. I should bring a bottle of this to the FLHS.

Bleeding Heart Hefeweizen

With blood oranges! Trying to ferment at 70F to evoke some banana out of the Danstar Munich, which is reported to be a little too clean at lower temperatures. Actual fermentation closer to 67. At bottling not much comes through in the way of aromatics, but I carbonated it at 3 volumes. Nice citrusy character from the blood oranges. The aromatics came through like a champ after carbonation! No banana, though.

Dunkelweizen? ITYM Funkelweizen

First stovetop brew with steeping grains! Fermented at 72F, which might be a tick high, but what's the point of learning if you always err on the side of caution? :) Swamp cooler is definitely under strain now that Carolina spring is in full swing. We'll see what the coriander and black pepper do--hoping they will complement the roasty malts. Bottled young (9 days) to have it ready by Easter. Gravity sample was funky, but not in a bad way. Slightly thin body, but delicious; compares favorably to Trader Joes dunkel. Less sweet, but I like it better.

AG Session Saison

Going warp-speed to all-grain, doing the Brew-In-A-Bag method on my stove. 90-minute mash (1.75 qts/lb) @ 149F. Down to 146F at 60 mins, added 2c boiling water (determined with infusion calculator). Brewhouse efficiency 71%. Fairly cloudy wort, lots of trub settling out. I hope I get a full case out of this! OG 1.050. Pitched T-58 at 70F, target 76F. Incredibly fast initial ferment (48 hours and it's back to low outgassing), only got up to ~74F.

FG 1.010, nice attenuation (a little more than planned for, actually, making this a proper saison/Belgian pale ale). Tasty! Lemony and tart, with the pepper adding a slight (and interesting) fruitiness. This will be perfect for the dog days to come.

AG Hard Root Beer

Styled after a Southern English Brown, malty and sweet, with extracts to add in secondary to try for a root-beery flavor. Mashing medium-high (154F). Used a voile curtain for this mash instead of the bag from the homebrew store. It has a much finer mesh, and much less trub was produced (though still significant amounts present).

The extract calls for ~15mL/0.5oz (3tsp) per gallon (60mL/2oz, "makes 4 gallons") when making root beer. Starting with 2 1-gallon jugs, adding 3.75mL (0.75 tsp) to one and 7.5mL (1.5 tsp) to the other. Bottling the rest with Cooper's or Munton's drops, and will add by the dropper to test.

AG Persephone RIS

My first attempt at an OG >1.1 beer, a Russian Imperial Stout. Raleigh water requires some mineral modification to bolster efficiency. Will double up the voile fabric for this mash. Racking onto hard root beer yeast cake (Windsor); considering pitching US-05 in secondary for better attenuation.

Kristen

JHitz

Brown Town

Fermentation notes from ClintonEbadi:

JWheatz

Recipe (source)

Sebastian

Fat Tire-inspired Amber Ale

forthcoming

Jamil's Blonde Ale Mod

Rachel

Joe's Ancient Orange Mead

*http://www.homebrewtalk.com/f80/joes-ancient-orange-mead-49106/

first attempt- too much honey used- extra sweet? nonetheless delicious

Recipes From Other Places