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It Puts the Yoghurt in the Wort

May 01, 2016 by Dickie Mok

Like homebrewers everywhere, we have recently caught the kettle souring bug.  How can you blame us?  The prospect of producing quick sour beers in a matter of weeks, not months (or years), is too tempting not to consider. 

As our first kettle sour beer, we wanted to keep things as simple as possible, just to get a basic idea of the process.  The plan: make a simple low OG wort from extract, pitch a tube of pure lacto and then let the wort sour using a sous vide circulator for a couple of days until the desired tartness was reached.  The problem: our LHBS was fresh out of lacto!  Thankfully, Milk That Funk has a helpful resource on alternative sources of souring bacteria.  

We ultimately decided to make an attempt at culturing lactobacillus using yoghurt.  The process was fairly simple: make a simple starter wort, add a couple spoons of yogurt (we used Fage non-fat Greek yoghurt), and maintain a temperature of around 40 celsius overnight.  The lacto starter was then pitched into the full extract wort as intended.

After around 2.5 days souring, the wort was definitely sour - fairly assertive but not overly so. The wort seemed different than usual (aside from the sourness), with a tiny bit of Chinese herbal tea going on.  It didn't taste like anything had gone seriously wrong, however, and we decided to go ahead with the beer (a cherry saison - see recipe below).  We'll see how it looks in a few weeks.

What you see above is a few of the beers we had submitted to the (only) home brew competition in Hong Kong. We didn't win anything, but we got some very good feedback and felt we were trending in the right direction with our beers overall! The citra pale ale (from our 26 February 2016 post) and the raspberry saison were highlights. We'll have a separate update on these beers soon, hopefully. 

D

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Sour Cherry Saison

Recipe Specifics
-------------------
Batch Size (Gal): 3.00
Total Grain (Lbs): 3 lbs
Anticipated OG: 1.040
Anticipated IBU: 12.00
Wort Boil Time: 60 Minutes

Extract
----------------
3.00 lbs Briess Pilsen Light DME 

Hops
------
0.40 oz Saaz (pellet, 4.00% AA) @ 60 min

Yeast
------
Danstar Belle Saison

Others
-----------------
1 litre Sour Cherry Juice

Notes
-------
26 April 2016:Prepared yoghurt starter.Mixed 1 litre of filtered water with 100g of DME, boiled 5 minutes and chilled to 40 c.Added around 2 tsp of Fage non-fat Greek yoghurt, held at 40 c.

27 April 2016:Mixed DME into 1 gal of distilled water and 2 gal of filtered water, boiled 5 minutes and chilled to 40 c.Swirled yoghurt starter and pitched into wort.Held wort at 40 c using sous vide circulator.

Brewed 30 April 2016. 

Boiled soured wort.Added 1 litre of sour cherry juice with 5 minutes left in boil, topped with filtered water to reach 3.0 gal. Measured OG at 1.040. 

Shook briefly to aerate, pitched rehydrated dry yeast.Chilled to 66F overnight.

 

May 01, 2016 /Dickie Mok
Saison, Sour

Raspberry Saison

December 22, 2015 by Dickie Mok in Recipes

A few weeks ago, we had brewed a batch of a simple extract saison. This was largely to use up the ingredients from our previous all-grain pumpkin saison, the brew process for which bent out of shape so spectacularly that we ended up naming it "The Phumpkin Menace" (it is, however, turning out pretty solid). Our intention was to rack the simple saison onto raspberries in secondary to get a fruity saison ready just in time for what passes for spring in Hong Kong.

This would not be our first shot at using fruit in secondary. Purely for the sake of experimentation, we had earlier infused an amber-brown ale we had brewed in separate carboys with cherries and strawberries/raspberries. The base beer however suffered from too much chocolate malt, which resulted in a prominent acrid burnt note in the beer that did not agree with the fruit. The strawberry batch also seemed to have a plastic/gasoline aroma to it. It was, however, a good learning experience overall.

We cracked open the fermenter to prepare to rack the saison onto secondary yesterday. The gravity clocked in at 1.007, a bit drier than estimated. It was also delicious, with bright spicy notes balanced by a slightly more assertive bitterness and nice roundness. So delicious, in fact, that we briefly contemplated foregoing the fruit altogether and bottling the batch as it was. But then, what to do with these raspberries...

We ended up going with our original plan. Hopefully the raspberries end up playing nice with the saison!

D

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Extract Raspberry Saison

Recipe Specifics

Batch Size (Gal): 4.00
Total Grain (Lbs.): 5 lbs.
Anticipated OG: 1.049
Anticipated SRM: 4.8
Anticipated IBU: 23.3
Wort Boil Time: 60 Minutes

Extract

3.00 lbs. Briess Golden Light DME (60.0%)
2.00 lbs. Briess Bavarian Wheat DME (40.0%)

Hops

0.50 oz. Styrian Goldings (pellet, 5.40% AA) @60 min
1.00 oz. Cascade (pellet, 5.50% AA) @ 10 min
0.50 oz. Mt. Hood (pellet, 6.00% AA) @ 10 min

Yeast

Danstar Belle Saison

Notes

Brewed 30 November 2015.

Mixed DME into 4.5 gal of filtered water and brought to boil. Topped up with sanitised filtered water post-boil to reach 4.0 gal. Measured OG at 1.050.

Shook briefly to aerate, pitched yeast directly from the package.  Chilled to 65F overnight.  Vigorous airlock activity began within 4 hours.  Allowed fermenter temperature to rise to 74F over the next few days.

15 Dec 2015: Measured gravity at 1.007 (below the expected FG of 1.015). Sample tastes dry and fruity.

21 Dec 2015: Gravity stable at 1.007. Racked to secondary on 3.2 lbs. of frozen raspberries. Fermentation kicked up again shortly after.

31 Dec 2015: Took a sample and measured gravity at 1.005. Tastes drier than prior to the raspberry, with a good amount of raspberry tartness.  The beer has taken on a lot of raspberry colour.

6 January 2015: Racked to bottling bucket from below the floating raspberries, collecting around 3.7 gal. Primed with sugar to 3.3 volumes of CO2. Filled 21 bottles.

December 22, 2015 /Dickie Mok
Raspberries, Saison, Extract
Recipes

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