16 May 2010

I drank this...

More like I will drink this.  This post's title is in reference to Infinite Jest a novel by David Foster Wallace.  There is a scene where a child eats some vile-looking mold and goes up to his mother and says something akin to "I ate this" whilst his face and mouth are covered in green.  Its funny to me, but I am not sure if its supposed to be funny.

So why I am talking about this novel? Well, when I see this stuff alive in my beer I think that it looks fantastic.  This is what I imagine the child in the book was thinking too.  How can I not consume this? I can only imagine that the lay person (or adult) would think that this looks like trouble. I like to think of the "trouble" as flavor crystals adding awesomeness to the beer. Now I just have to wait, again.

Some pictures:
pellicle pelicle
Camera One, Camera Two:
I think that's a pellicle (white) forming on the left- I hope the other gunk is from the cherry concentrate
On the right there is no visible activity


A little closer

Updates: Homebrew log

Update:
5/9/2010: Floaters in the Cherry'ed Flanders Red


Update:

5/14/2010 - added additional 14.5 oz cherry to brown ale
5/14/2010 - added additional 10 oz cherry to Flanders Red


Update:
5/15/2010 - Pellicle forming in Flanders Red with cherry?

Floaters in the Flanders Red

Flanders Red with Cherry and Floaters

After I added the cherry to the one half of the Valentine's Day 2009 Flanders Red these appeared:


It appears now, one day after adding more cherry that a pellicle is forming pictures to come...

06 May 2010

There's actually one more bucket going now ...

L -R: Cherry Brown, Cherry Flanders Red 09, Flanders Red 09, Flanders Red x2 10

03 May 2010

Latest Happenings in the Brewery

4/8/2010 - Flanders Red A
4/8/2010 - Flanders Red B

4/16/2010 - Cherry Brown Ale
4/16/2010 - Witbier

4/29/2010 - Bottled Witbier

05/02/2010 - Racked Cherry Brown to secondary; added cherry (31 oz by weight)
05/02/2010 - Racked Flanders Red (brewed 2/14/2009) into two PET water bottles; half with cherry (15 oz by weight)

05/03/2010 - Racked Flanders Red A & B to secondary

More details to come . . .

Kentucky Common Revealed

I bottled the Kentucky Common on about March 15th, 2010.  The FG was 1.008 ~ 5.08% ABV

I think it tastes great, it is sour and crisp. A great summer brew.  It doesn't pack the lactic punch of a berliner weisee, but the sourness within provides that 'sumtin' that makes it quite enjoyable.  Here's to brewing an extirpated piece of America.

The recipe which I neglected to include before, see souring procedure here:

.75 oz Glacier Hops 7.4 AA @ 60 min
Wyeast American Ale




22% 2 4 American Six-row Pale 

19% 2 0 Flaked Corn (Maize) 

18% 1 14 American Two-row Pale 

13% 1 6 American Two-row Pale 

5% 0 8 Sugar, Table (Sucrose) 

5% 0 8 American Crystal 90L 

5% 0 8 Belgian Aromatic 

5% 0 8 Crystal 10L 

4% 0 6 Caramunich Malt 20 

2% 0 4 Special B Malt 

2% 0 3 Carafa II