2 years forgotten

Apparently I have this odd little habit of procrastination. Of forgetfulness. Of just being a bit shite really. I mean, sure, I have my valid excuses… Work. Beer. Child spawn. Just a few wee little bits here and there to cramp my style and get in the way of the tippity tap tapping of my creative juices.

So, I am promising to myself that this will not be the last post for the next two years. I will return again to this little place where I ramble and try to make sense of myself and malts.

Cheers, luvs.

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Blogs, Ballast, and Brews

It seems life has a way of pulling out rugs and battering heads in. But as per usual, this old Brew Girl tries to take it in stride and move along. Just as one emotional roadblock appears and is being dealt with, I manage to find a way into a physically painful roadblock as well. Long story short, my heart is mending as is my knee. (vague no?) 

So I dump ballast, move on, and try to heal as best I can. AND with typical Brew Girl style that means volunteering for more things within the Homebrew Club and at my Brewery. I raised my hand to offering to do all the begging for money (sponsership) for an upcoming competition AND I took on a lot of the decoration and crafting for our Anniversary Party (shameless plug). 

Throw in a beer festival, this neglected beer blog, the article for the UK blog and many industry nights at my favorite local brewery and you have one busy Brew Girl. Oh, don’t forget I’m the mother to a whirlwind of a toddler… I need a TARDIS so I can escape and sleep for several days on end.

All these things remind me that I have plans, abilities, and a ridiculously awesome support system.

Enough of that wishy washy feely junk. 

Check back soon for actual beer related stuff. 

I’m working on it. 

HONEST!

  

being a wonder woman doesn’t mean you don’t get injured every once in a while

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New Things and New England

Hello my darlings! As usual, apologies for my tardiness. I don’t have much reason to be so late. I just have a kid, a Home Brew club, an awesome job at a fab Brewery, and oh yea I kinda do this whole beer blogging thing.

In kid news, she’s great and pretty soon I reckon she’ll follow directions enough that she can actually help me brew. Her palate is developing and when she accompanies me to the Brew Shop she gets her “two sips” of beer with “extra fizz” (a drop of beer plus water out of the cooler [she may as well be drinking Bud Lite]) which she enjoys just like a proper little brewer as she wanders around poking the malts.

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brewdog and brewkid

Speaking of the Brew Shop, in Home Brew Club News we had our first big competition of the year, The Doug King Memorial Home-brewing Competition. I entered two beers. My Thai Bride Pils (Thai rice lager made with Jasmine and Glutenous rice) and my Fireside & Pipe Smoke (the smoked malt ESB). I haven’t received my score sheets back but I know the ESB didn’t place but wasn’t a complete disaster. The lager takes some getting used to, the jasmine flavor is prominent and is unusual. I actually quite liked it and will be brewing it again. So there!

In more Brew news my part on the Board for the Maltose Falcons taps into my deep seated need to feed people. I am one of two Burgermeisters (we prefer Burger Fraüs as we’re both ladies, shut up, I’M A LADY!). Since the other lovely Fraü had other things to worry about (none of your concern so just move along) I had the Apron of Responsibility wrapped around my ample tums. So since one of our Pro-Ams (professional / amateur) was a new category called The British are Coming and included anything British, I decided to make a proper British meal. Bangers and Mash. I won’t go into the dirty details of making sausage but dude, we had a pretty epic lunch that day. Congrats to the winners of the Comp! Their beers will be brewed at Eagle Rock and at MacLeod’s (obvy the final beer that comes out will have had some gentle guidance from the breweries).

Let’s see… Work. I hate to call it “work” because it’s just the best job ever. I get to sling beer and drink beer and brew beer and learn about beer. See? How is that WORK? I’ve had three beers on tap since Thanksgiving. Thai Bride Pilsner, Fireside & Pipe Smoke, and Fireside & Pipe SmOAKed. Who needs to win a Home Brew Comp when you can get instant feedback from paying customers?! My cohort wants to do a collaboration beer so that’ll be fun and random!

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some of my beers on tap

Hmmm… What am I missing? Oh right, last order of news. Beer Blogging. Not this blog. But somewhere else. Somewhere… Different. Pop on over and give it a gander. It’s all about my galavanting around in the Massachusetts over the weekend. So expect more updates from me here since once I start rambling I can’t seem to stop.

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just some of my empties in the snow

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Friday Fun Tap, Fireside -n- Pipe-smoke, and Forward Thinking

Skipping over the train wreck that is October and all the nasty pumpkin-flavoured-pumpkin-spiced EVERYTHING out there, let’s wander on over to November. Well, the end of November really. I am quite shite at keeping up to date lately. Along with working in the tasting room at the brewery and being a less-than-perfect-mum and being an-awesome-whatever-I-am and being on the board for the Maltose Falcons Homebrewing Club, I have also been struggling with my mental state.

For those not in the know, around this time last November I was diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder and Depression. I found solace in brewing (meds helped too). Brewing gives me focus and a future to look forward to. It’s been a year (a rocky year) and though I still have so much to learn and so much of my life to get in order, I know I am still on the right path. So with all the crazy that comes with having a mental disorder I have been lax in brewing and blogging.

However, since I DO work in a brewery I have been given the opportunity to brew at work and have the results served in the tasting room.

This past Friday we had my first finished brew on tap. Fireside -n- Pipe-smoke. An English style bitter with a slight smoked malt profile. Sessionable at 3.41% abv with a gentle sparkle a malty presence and just the eensiest hint of smoke on the finish. I was pretty stoked. It went down a storm (once people got over the low alcohol content) and I got pretty good feedback, though more constructive criticism would have been nice. I will be rebrewing it and most likely submitting it to a competition in January. (Eek!)

I have plans for more brews. So. Many. Brews. I just need to keep focus and get on it!

Forward! Get Going!

Maybe after this cup of tea…

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fireside -n- pipe-smoke on tap this past friday

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Hiatus and Happenings

Well, long time no type…

It has been quite a while since I was last found tip tap typing on my trusty iPad. Mainly due to being a single mum. In May, prior to my fantastic trip back to the land I consider home, I had made the decision to leave my well paying job in order to work full time at a less paying job, mothering. As rewarding as it is to be a mother, it is a time consuming, hair pulling, stressful, terribly humorous, and basically a pro bono job.

The silver lining (besides being with my kidlet for what seems like more hours than there is in a day) is that I have a little more time for beer. Not necessarily brewing, though I have managed to get two brews done in that time. But I am able to take a day off here and there to travel to breweries and spend time with other beer geeks. Which is delightful but perhaps not great for my waistline. I suppose it’s a hazard of the job I aspire to have.

Speaking of jobs and beer. I managed to weasel my way in to a sort of job at one of my favorite breweries. Sanctum. A lovely little baby of a brewery which I probably mentioned before. I may or may not have bribed them with cupcakes. And by may or may not I totally mean I did.

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sweet delicious bribes

If you happen to be in the area on a Thursday, Friday, or Saturday you should really come by and have me sling you a beer or three. In fact, if you haven’t already heard me mention it, you ought to swing by on the 20th of this month for our NotoberFest. Tickets on sale now!

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i am not above shameless promotion

In other brews (see what I did there), I attended my first meeting of the homebrew club I joined back in November, The Maltose Falcons. Now, I’ve stewarded at two competitions, and was tricked into attending a sort of meeting (it was sold to me as simply a mead tasting but nope, it was a Maltose event). But attending a meeting with lots of more experienced brewers is just a bit daunting. Add to that my general dislike of humans in larger groups and you are left with one very awkward and anxious BrewGirl.

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so. much. mead.

Regardless, I felt it was probably time to attend one of these things (actually I was gently bullied by one of the other Falcons but that’s okay). I sat myself, as usual, as close to the door (and a swift exit) as possible. I sat alone. I nervously scanned the growing crowd. I scrunched low in my seat and wished myself smaller and smaller with every breath. Eventually, I felt more comfortable… This may have been due to the fact we were tasting beer and I finally had some liquid courage flowing through my veins.

Either way, I didn’t have a terrible time. I even volunteered for a position on the board. I know. ME. VOLUNTEERED. Madness. Of course it was to assist the current Burgermeister, the lovely person who feeds the masses, which is a subject I can handle pretty easily. We actually have a banquet coming up for which, again, I crazily volunteered my cake lady knowledge and skills. *hangs head* I don’t know why I do this to myself. Although, on the plus side, I get to attend the banquet for free, well for the low, low price of cake makings anyway.

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made cake skillz yo

So there you go. So many things have changed and I am certain more will continue to evolve.

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clockwise from left: MacLeod Ale Brewing Company in Van Nuys, Ladyface Ale Companie in Agoura Hills, Hamilton Family Brewing in Rancho Cucamonga, Bottle Logic in Anaheim

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Scheming and socks always make for a good time..

So in an all together not so surprising move, where my lack of filter and impulse control seem to just take over, and after I managed to gain entrance to this years 34th London Wine Fair, I went to work chatting, learning, and networking in typical cheerful BrewGirl style.

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squee and oh holy crap please don’t ask me for my badge

Yup. That totally happened.

As usual, I shan’t bore you with the nitty gritty details of the dark and seedy underbelly of the wine world or how I managed to underground railroad my way in…

I was there for one thing and one thing only. Beer.

Craft beer. British Craft Beer.

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not actually at the London Wine Fair, but you know, BEER!

Now, I know I am a noob. I have only been doing this whole homebrew thing for less than a year. I have only delved headfirst into the craft beer scene for only a year more than the homebrew lark. I have been drinking for quite a bit longer and the whole culinary school thing kinda lends a bit of weight to my beery opinions. I guess. Sort of?

Regardless, the folks in the craft beer community are far and wide some of the nicest people you can meet. Even though I was only a “freelance writer” (this blog totally counts right?) and even with my limited knowledge I was still accepted. Unfortunately most of the booths were manned by distributors or sales reps and not necessarily brewers. Though many of the sales reps were actually people who worked on site at the brewery and you could tell they had a love for the place.

Anyway. ON TO THE BEER!

Getting to the beer section required (yes, REQUIRED) that I stop and check out some distilleries and wine vendors. In classic neurotic BrewGirl style I actually mapped out my route. I circled (obviously in pink biro [ballpoint pen]) the booths I wished to check out. I started with Ron Caney, rum from Santiago, Cuba. Dodging the request for a business card and with trembling voice I requested a wee dram. The lady behind the table dubiously provided me a quarter shot of golden rum. The Oro Ligero (a blend of 3 to 5 year old rums) was pretty much vanilla and sunshine in a glass. I could, and would, happily sip this unadulterated, bar a cube or two of ice. I didn’t want to press my luck so I hastily waved my thanks and snuck away. First stop done, palms sweating, I headed to stop two…

Williams Chase Distillery is already known to BrewGirl. When BrewGirl was younger, more carefree, and slinging drinks, the Williams Chase name was new to the market. In 2010 we started stocking the apple-vodka based Gin so I was quite interested in checking out their booth. I was fascinated to learn that the estate, which produces entirely English Vodka and Gin, recently purchased a vineyard in Provence, France. They are in the process of rebranding the current wine towards a younger audience. Case in point, the burlesque dancer strewn across one of the labels. The newest, and purely Chase release, is their 2013 Provençal Rosé, which is in the decidedly Chase brand bottle complete with fancy glass stopper. As usual, BrewGirl pansied out and made good her escape before sampling this particular tipple. I am sure, however, there is plenty of room for the young company to grow a bit on this venture and they seem to be on a good path. Speaking of paths, I am honestly trying to get to the beer before getting completely hammered on “tasters”…

The last stop in this section was meant to be the Angus Dundee Distillers but they were quite busy and I am quite awkward (to say the least) so I snapped a few pics and meandered away.

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okay not yet on to the beer…

Quickly in regard to wine (as if I can be quick about wine, lolz). In attendance were all sorts of distributors of wines. In the main halls of the fair were mostly large names and many serious looking besuited shapes. Upon entrance to the fair I had quickly ducked past all the stern eyes and tried to look as inconspicuous as possible, no small feat given my mismatched owl socks and cowboy boots. Unphased, I continued on, as the only section of the fair in which I was interested, was located in the Galleria Hall.

Esoterica is a new addition to the wine fair. It is the destination for the smaller independent importers of the quirky, rare, unusual, organic, biodynamic etc. Some wines were meh. Some were bleh. The section on Wines from China caught my eye but, less so, once I cottoned on to the fact they were just made in China (like so many other things amiright?) but were crafted by expats.

The two wines that really got my attention were the Vinho Verde from Mico (distributed by Mason & Mason) and the Tarongino (distributed by Winesque). I have always looked for Vino Verde, it’s flavor is literally more green to me, more citrusy, more lush, more more-ish. I was introduced to it years and years and years ago (okay, maybe let’s just ignore the amount of years ago) by one of my many, many, many ex-boyfriends (let’s ignore the many on this too.) Ever since I have always kept a look out for it when I go wine hunting, usually to no avail. Now, to be fair I am quite distractible so my eyes may have passed over a bottle or two in favor of a beer or a lush Zinfandel. If you happen to find any Vino Verde, give me a jingle, I’ll happily help you toast your accomplishment.

Now, the second wine standout… That Tarongino. Wine made from orange juice. Let that sink in. ORANGE. JUICE. I was doubtful. I played along with the adorable Italian sales rep. Yea, yea, sure it’s something special… One sip and holy mother of Bacchus. Made with Valencia oranges the wine was sweet but had a delicious bitter backbone to keep it from being cloyingly so. I did not sample the Clementina (Clementine) version though I am certain it was lovely. The Sanguina (blood orange) tasted as if you had freshly pressed a bucket of blood oranges and filtered the resulting juice until it was a crystal clear, lightly pink elixir of pure joy. Aaaaand that is pretty much going to be the base of all my sweet dreams for the next few years I reckon.

The last label is from Vinterloper which I didn’t at all taste. I just loved the artwork. The husband, a former basketball player, is the one making the goods, his wife, is the artist making ’em pretty. After reading all the webernets I really wish I had grown a pair and tried their wines in lieu of just taking pictures.

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beer! oh, wait, no, still not beer…

Okay. Seriously, guys. BEER!

Basically this is now going to turn into a geeky, no description slideshow, because 1) it’s my blog and I’ll do what I want and 2) details get fuzzy from here on out…

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Meantime Brewing, Beaer’s Premium Lager, Brew Dog, Freedom Brewery

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Harviestoun Brewery, Harviestoun Ola Dubh, Old Dairy Brewery

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Moor Beer Company, Beerd Brewery’s Monocle English Pale Ale, Beerd Brewery’s Silvertip NZ Pale Ale

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Bath Ales Brewery, Wild Beer Company, Siren Craft Brew

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Batemans, Batemans Bohemian Brews on show, pouring Black Pepper Ale, finished Black Pepper Ale

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Mastri Birra Umbri, gorgeous bottles, secret ingredient (lentils local to the brewery)

A few words (again, lolz). So many of the beers on show were quintesentially British. Smooth, gently carbonated, aromatic hoppy nose, light hop flavor, and incredibly easy to drink. I don’t want to do them an injustice by not espousing their deliciousness, but after a while they do all become a haze of comfortable tastes. There were several that really leapt out at me:

Beaer’s Premium Lager (apparently the brewery is so young one beer had only been tapped and tasted the night before) have worked hard to create a low sugar but not low flavor beer. They succeeded in a way that the larger, not to be named, conglomerate beer companies have failed to do. Malty and light with a fluffy head. Their Pilsner style lager is as it should be but with a diabetically friendly low sugar content. Their remaining lineup is pretty solid.

Beerd Brewery’s Silvertip New Zealand Pale Ale was tropical and light and refreshingly crisp. The fizz was just right and the hops were clean and abundant without being overbearing. Monocle English Pale Ale was also super delish. This little brewery is actually brewing out of Bath Ales location and was born from a craft pizzeria in Bristol, so most of what they do is experimental. I can’t wait to see what else they do.

Bath Ales were all completely sessionable. The beer names are adorbs. The Ginger Hare, according to the sales rep, had a way of drawing the ladies to the table. It will come as no surprise to those that know me, that I do so adore the gingers, so I too was snared. Wild Hare, the sales reps’ personal favorite outshone the lineup, crazy smooth, perfectly balanced malt and hops. Another purely British brew where all the malts and hops used were grown in Britain. Plus the bunny logo makes me think of Watership Downs and I love them even more.

Wild Beer Company had a few that I was meh about, but that is the BrewGirl opinion and I still like what they are trying to do. The Sourdough basically tastes like I’m in the kitchen kneading the still warm bread dough. I am super happy I brought a bottle home to share.

Siren Craft Brew. Besides having a gorgeous label (I’m a girl and have always loved mermaids, get over it) every one of the beers I’ve tried are seriously good. The IPA is as usual not to my palate but the gentle aroma of hops on this one was nearly enough to turn me. Broken Dreams, a breakfast stout, is outstanding. However, the beer I would happily follow a crooning song to my death is the Caribbean Chocolate Cake collaboration with Cigar City. Pardon my language, but holy crap tits. I can’t even describe this Imperial Stout. I wish I had had more luggage space.

I actually didn’t try the main line from Batemans. I was too excited to try the Black Pepper Ale released under their Bohemian Brews label which gives Batemans the creative license to experiment with new flavors without perhaps ostracising their main following. The clever marketing on this ale is that a little sachet of black pepper is hidden under the collar with directions on forming the perfect glass. I wish I had had the forethought to ask for a taste prior to the black pepper being added to my glass, but hind sight, fifty fifty and all that jazz.

Due to the ritual of grinding pepper, pouring beer, grinding more pepper, and perhaps my girlish delight, we managed to attract the attention of a little film crew. Two gents from MGL Media were in attendance and with camera poised on my taster glass we all waited for the last ground of pepper to float lazily onto the frothy head. Long story short this crazy BrewGirl from California with the mismatched socks may very well be in a Craft Beer documentary coming out next year… WTF?!

The last brews I tasted were from the Italian brewery Mastri Birra Umbri. The bottles were what drew me to the very simply bedecked table. Now, don’t get me wrong, having a table laid out with only a bucket of bottles on ice and two un-chilled bottles as display is a risky manoeuvre considering most booths were covered with layers of beer, pamphlets, coasters, and all on varying heights. The table was unmanned on my first pass down the alley. If not for the film crew convincing me to wait for the fella to come back I would have missed out on the highlight of the day.

As I mentioned before, the bottles, black grolsh bottles with gold trim, and elaborately bedecked golden keys, they pretty much had my inner Asian chomping at the bit. The beers were exceptional. I know I could tell one had Saison yeast and that seemed to impress the Italian a bit (I’m going with he was impressed and not bored so shut it) but really I forgot all my tasting notes because the fella wasn’t a sales rep, he wasn’t a logistics manager, he wasn’t a distributor, HE WAS THE BREWER! Be still my heart. Pretty sure my awkward level went super saiyan at that moment.

Another long story short, the final pour he gave me, he didn’t explain, he just cryptically said “I’m going to pour you this, and then we’ll talk about it later.” I cautiously sipped the deep russet beer. I am pretty sure it was a dubbel but with an underlying current of earthiness. The Italian smiled and rummaged under his table. Then handed me a bag full of lentils. I took the offering, looked him straight in the eyes, and exclaimed, “You’re [effing] kidding me. [Effing] LENTILS?”

I’ll end on this note… I gave that man a hug. A proper, awkward, over the table, slightly tipsy, BrewGirl hug.

Best day.

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brewgirl at the end of a long day… deliriously, deliciously, disturbingly cheerful

[also, i totally don’t have a pic of my mismatched owl socks, but they are pretty great, trust me.]

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Real life, real fun, and real ale

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oh just a few bottles…

BrewGirlSocal goes forth into the wide world of “Real ale” and “Casks” and “Whoositsandwhatsits”. This strange land known as, England.

For those that don’t know (which I imagine is most of you) I spent many a lovely year in England. Five years in fact. Of those five, zero were spent in the pursuit of beer. I had a soul sucking job. I had a husband. I had friends. I had wine.

Back in those days I was much more into wine. I was about four years out of culinary school so perhaps some of my wine training had actually stuck. And whilst the local shop wasn’t exactly a mecca for the most amazing wine selection, the town boasted several pretty decent restaurants with more than decent wine lists.

I spent quite a few pounds and £’s on my little affair with wine.

Eventually, after the beginnings of the “Times of Troubles”, I ended up working at such an establishment. Nearly two years of slinging beer, mixing drinks, and explaining wine to the townsfolk left me a bit jaded and possibly more of a lush than to begin with.

When I made my way back to the States (child in tow and tail between my legs) I was tempted to seek solace in the bottle of Gin I had so often called my mistress. However on one day, aptly the day of the New Year, my brother hosted a Fancy Beer Night. It was almost as though a new Me was ushered forth with the entrance of that new Year.

I threw myself into this new obsession. I found breweries nearby. I bought bottles of beer. I cajoled my brother into drinking with me (no big feat really). Finally I found that home brewing was a thing people did. Like, ACTUALLY did. I googled. I hemmed and hawed. I found a home brew shop nearby. I visited. I geeked out. I got awkward and I bought books. Then I bought brewing equipment. Then I bought malt, hops, and yeast.

I tell you all this so you can see the short journey I took. Well, I guess it’s actually a very long distance for a short journey. When I tell my family and friends that brewing is where my future lies. They nod because it’s as if it was an obvious track for me. But like most things, I didn’t see it, until it was there in my hands.

So where does this fit in to the title of this post?

Well, when I lived in England, I lived in a teeny, tiny town. The craft beer scene wasn’t really there. In the ACTUAL cities perhaps. But in my little town it was only just starting. There were pubs that still had their cask ales. Their real ales. Brewed in the same county. There were no fancy shops selling fancy beer. There was Sainsbury’s, Tesco, Marks & Spencers, or maybe Waitrose.

As far as I knew there was Purity Brewing Company, the Punchbowl with it’s line of nearby breweries’ taps, and the little Wild Boar pub with it’s tiny brewery in the back. That was it.

So now that I’m back in England with knowledge and a thirst, I find it fascinating that this world of craft beer was just lurking underneath. Nearby. Like that ninja cat. You turn your head and it creeps up on you.

Weird.

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oh, just a few more bottles…

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Racking or Wrecking?

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black forest gateau stout/ lady persephone amber/ piña colada pale

Another attempt at squeezing 30 hours worth of work into 24 hours worth of day. Moderately successful all things considered. I managed to finish 8 hours at the soul sucking desk job. I took the traitorous car in to have more money bled from my withering pocketbook. I played with my kid for as long as she was interested in me (30 minutes but who’s counting?) then slung the mucky critter into the bath.

Finally at 9:15 I was unencumbered by my womb monkey and I got to work racking the Black Forest Gateau Stout into a 3 gallon carboy. Yes, for those paying attention, 3 gallons. Originally this sucker weighed in at just 5 gallons… I reckon it’s just at 4 (please oh please) but it’s probably at 3.5 gallons (dangit!) The OG was 1.120 40 days ago. Since then I’ve dumped a significant amount of black cherries and cocoa nibs into the inky depths. At racking this big boy is now 1.042 which internet sources tell me means it’s currently at 9.19% abv.! SCHWEET!

Next up to receive the rack was Lady Persephone (mach 2). After consulting my notes (instagram) I found the OG of 1.065 and, thanks to the wonders of math, I can say that the alcohol content is 5.91% (FG was 1.020). Finicky little bugger this one. I have what I want it to smell and taste like catalogued in the bar in my mind. I still have a bit more development on this one. Ironically the brewshop just had a class on recipe development… I suggested to the Ginger Beer Teacher (GBT) that perhaps I ought to attend, he laughed and said it’d be a waste of my money given I don’t listen to any suggestions he’s made so far. Truth.

Lastly I siphoned off the Piña Colada Pale Ale, well that is to say that I siphoned off the Pale Ale which is now a swirling sight of coconut, orange, and pineapple. The grain bill on this simple fella was 18lbs of 2row pale malt (shut up GBT!) the hops are all Citra (seriously GBT, shush!) and good old American Ale yeast. A taste sip of the flat beer suggests that it is beer! Currently the gravity is 1.018 which is .052 less than the OG, so this Piña Colada is only at 6.83%… Until the pineapple sugars get eaten up of course. We’ll just have to wait.

Wait and sing…

If you like Piña Coladas, getting caught in the rain…

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Hangovers and Hangups

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racking my precious, hard gleaned wort

Another moderately successful brew day. Successful in that there was a mash, a lauter (sort of), wort (just barely), the yeast was pitched, and my fingers are crossed. Shall I start from the beginning? May as well deviate from my usual.

I had a flavor profile in mind. A big boy of a stout. Black Forest Gateau in nature. Chocolate, cherries, and a dash of vanilla to round it out and trick the nose into a semblance of dessert sweetness. Vanilla beans and cocoa nibs (sorry Brudder, I know you hate that term) are happily sequestered in a boozy bath of vodka. The grain bill, a whopping 31 pounds lovingly dumped into my mash/lauter tun.

So hey, 31 pounds turns out to be more than my equipment can handle. I had to dough in in three stages. It took two gallons of water to wet all the grain. Aaaaand now I start to worry and wish I had 1) a stronger grasp of math 2) more patience to read 3) had bothered to use all the formulas available to me to calculate quantities.

In more classic Brewgirlsocal style I started reading about handling all the dark, roasted grain, which took up a third of the grain bill, AFTER I had already started to sparge. Oh and about that, sorting a stuck sparge is kinda, to quote my brew gal pal, BALLS!!! Pretty sure I effed that step up pretty fabulously. The resulting wort, which flowed in achingly slow fits and dribbles, was blacker than black and as thick as blood. It ought to be, it nearly drained me of mine.

At least I managed to get enough wort to boil. Of course I had to add 3 additional gallons of RO (reverse osmosis) water, and even then I only eked in at just 5 gallons of black gold. Added 2 pounds of dark cherries, 1 ounce of nugget hops and boiled. 2 ounces of fuggles hops, yeast nutrient, and the Irish moss went in at 15 minutes to the end of the boil along with the wort chiller. Chilled to 75 degrees, racked into the carboy, and pitched the English ale yeast. Original gravity of the resulting wort was 1.129, which was 0.020 less than what the beer software suggested would it would be.

Learning sucks. Let’s just hope what ever comes out of this little folly doesn’t.

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original gravity

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Business Brewing

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saison for the brudder

Another weekend another brew… Or four. Not to mislead all you dear folks, all two of you, I did not in fact manage to brew four beers in a day. I simply sorted out, racked, tested, and tasted the four brews that have been residing in different spots in and outside of the house. I reckon I should really start taking more notes instead of relying on the steel sieve that is my mind. But I take photos of the hydrometer readings and fully intend to update my notes. Honest I do.

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maple wine

In other news: After discussing with my brain trust (which consists of my brother, my best beery gal pal, and the kid I went to culinary school with who has now become a friggin’ legend [asshole]) I have finally settled on a name. A name for the pipe dream brewery. Ah crap THAT would be a good name too!

I am going through all the research required and figuring out all the junk I need to. It’s weird. I’m used to my little “hobbies” fizzling out and going the way of the dodo. I am unaccustomed to the real passion that ignites metaphorical fires and fuels marathons of productivity. Oh sure, I have intensity and focus, but never the long lasting love for any one thing. For those that know me and can concur with the above statement, you’ll know that I have a hard time looking forward into the future. Looking past two months ahead would normally send me into a panic attack. With this one “hobby”. This one tiny idea that started with a sip and has since turned into a full blown gulp has sent my view farther into the future than ever before.

Don’t mistake this sentiment as putting my beer before my bairn. I can assure you. She is as integral to the survival of this brew plot as the beer is to hers. Without either of these two facets of my life I am sure I would feel much more of a wandering soul.

Enough gooey junk. On to the beer!

A simple Saison for the brudder is the first picture. I am super excited about the clarity of this one (the pic does not do it justice). Flavor is light and farmyardy. As you’d expect from this style. I am stoked that the persnickety yeast which favors warmer temps tolerated the chaotic California winter. Two weeks to settle and then off to the bottle.

Maple wine, is mapley and winey. 3 quarts (or crap was it 4?!) went in to the brew. A handful of Saaz hops to offset the sweetness, dry white wine yeast, and in another month I’ll add more maple and bottle the brew.

Brudder Weisse is the next (not pictured). Sour mash. A messy stinky bit of business that was. Primary ferment had kefir lime leaves, lemon grass, and ginger. I need to get the lychees and white peaches for the secondary but so far the ginger is pretty strong… And after the disaster of the first brewing of this one I am wary. Darn you extra little critters!

Lastly is the rebrew of Lady Persephone (also not shown). Amber Ale with citrus and pomegranates. Citrus is there for sure. Pomegranate… Not so much. I will add yet more pom juice which would make this the THIRD fermentation… Siiiigh. Finished with Champagne yeast, the dryness is quite complimentary to the Valencia orange, grapefruit, and lime zests that were added during primary fermentation. Huzzah!

Oh and hey. Let’s all say “hi!” to the newest bit of brew girl kit, this iPad. Which as begrudgingly as I’ll admit, has come in handy for adding length to my posts without me tossing my iPhone out the window in frustration.

Keep it up iPad. Else you’ll be feeling the cool, crisp California air whizzing past your precious iOS.

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brewgirl gets serious about beer or at least about retail therapy

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