(38) Sunday, July 8, 2012 Brew Day – Kitchen Sink Small IPA
I promised that I would make Gretchen a low alcohol hoppy beer that would taste like an IPA without all the alcohol. Today, I am attempting to do just that. I looked at a few recipes in Zymurgy and BYO and looked at what I had on hand and come up with this recipe to try. It also helps me clean out my left over grain.
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NHC 2012 Gallery
NHC 2012 Swag Bag
Okay. I just checked in. I’m wearing the wrist band that I have to wear for the next three days, and I picked up my SWAG BAG!
Going to NHC 2012
I am on my way to the 34th Annual National Homebrewers Conference. I am going to keep journal entries on the trip.
Here is my agenda:
(37) Sunday, June 3, 2012 Brew Day — Night Horse Dry Stout v3
Today is another attempt to refine my Night Horse Dry Stout. I have the feedback from the NHC 2012 first round results. The score average was 26.5 (low 24, high 29). Scores of 21 to 29 are considered good. Both judges were BJCP recognized. I have combined them here into a single review.
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(36) Sunday, May 20, 2012 Brew Day – Dark Mild
Today, I am making an English Brown Ale. The recipe is Jamil Zainasheff’s Through a Mild Darkly from Brewing Classic Styles. I am making the all-grain version with only one substitution. I am using roasted barley in place of the black patent malt.
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A Six-Pack of Blonde Ale
Let’s brew a six-pack of beer.
Goal
I am a craft beer drinker. I like the full body and flavors that I cannot find in mass produced beers. That said, there is a time and a place for everything. On a hot day after hard work, or when I just want to quench my thirst, it is convenient to have a good lawnmower beer on hand. Something that is not complex. A clean, simple, balanced, low-alcohol beer. An American Light Lager may be what comes to mind, but lagering is a challenge, especially for small batches, and brewing with adjuncts has never been my thing. So I would really like something similar, but that can be brewed as an ale with simple ingredients. That, my friend, is what the American Blonde Ale style is all about.
More on Buying by the Sack
I am following up on my post from the other day.
Gretchen picked me up one of these 50-pound Vittles Vault containers to keep grain in, so I went ahead and ordered a sack of Maris Otter.
Buying by the Sack
I brewed 35 batches of beer between 4/19/2008 and 2/27/2012. That means I have brewed about every seven weeks. I would have guessed it would have been more frequent. In the last year, I have brewed about every four weeks. That is more like it. The average grain bill for my last 13 batches has been about 12 pounds. If it were all base malt then I would be going through a 55 pound sack of grain every five months or so. I have been using Crisp Maris Otter as my base malt, so let us see what the marketplace for sacks holds.
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Midwest Supplies: $63.99 + $26.28 shipping = $90.27 -or- $1.64 per pound shipped
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Fifty Pound Sack: $79.00 + $0.00 shipping = $79.00 -or- $1.43 per pound shipped
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Brewmasters Warehouse: $101.75 + $6.99 shipping = $107.99 -or- $1.96 per pound shipped
Just for comparison, here are the same vendors for 10 pounds of Crisp Maris Otter, noting that Fifty Pound Sack only sells by the sack.
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Midwest Supplies: $16.99 + $13.56 shipping = $30.55 -or- $3.06 per pound shipped
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Brewmasters Warehouse: $18.50 + $6.99 shipping = $25.49 -or- $2.55 per pound shipped
While they do not sell by the sack, I have been buying my Crisp Maris Otter from Rebel Brewer. Here is their price for 10 pounds.
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Rebel Brewer: $14.31 + $14.02 shipping = $28.33 -or- $2.83 per pound shipped
So, I could pay just over 50% of what I have been paying by buying by the sack.