Thursday, November 14, 2013

Pizza with beer yeast

Little off topic here, but I was planning to make some pizza yesterday when I realized I was out of bread yeast, wife was out and I have had too much beer to drive to a local store, so what the hell, when ahead with a pack of S04 dry yeast.
Here's the recipe, in case someone is interested:
2 cups flour
2 table spoons wheat gluten
1 tea spoon salt
2 tea spoons sugar
1 pack S04
1cup water
1/4 cup olive oil
Your choice of topping

Add the yeast, 1 tea spoon of sugar and 1 tea spoon of flour to the water, lukewarm temperature, whisk and let it sit for 15min.
Mix all remaining dry ingredients first, then add the yeasty water and olive oil, knead for 7min in a mixer with a hook.
Let raise for 30min, open the dough, let raise again for 30min and add your toppings. Set in oven at 450F for 10min, check crust to your taste, leave more if you like it very crispy.
By the way, wife and kids don't know about the beer yeast, no one noticed any difference on the pizza. I however taste the dough to be lighter, a milder bread flavor than regular bread yeast.



















Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Blue Moon Clone #12


Increased coriander from 0.375oz to 0.5oz from recipe #11. Very tasty and refreshing beer. I can't tell the difference to the commercial beer.
Complete recipes here.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Blue Moon clone # 10&11

My #9 BM clone was a disaster. Used WY1010-American Wheat yeast and that may be the culprit, lots of clove taste, had to dump the whole batch.
Anyways, posting here the results of #10 and #11, here were the changes:

#10
Mashed for 75min, not planned
Used 6.5lb of wheat and only 3lb of row, not planned. Run out of 2 row

#11
Used double orange peels, so full 3oz

Here's the side by side pic

Can you guess what is what?

Left is #10, center is the commercial, right is #11.

Color wise, very similar, hard to pick one. Taste wise, the double orange tasted much closer to the commercial beer for me.

recipes are posted to same place, Here


Saturday, April 13, 2013

The Ultimate Mobile Homebrew Dispenser

Watching TV, no, this is how I spend some spair time (and $).


Features:

  • 2 taps, capacity for two 2.5 gal kegs + ice.
  • External CO2 ball lock post, to connect a compact CO2 injector or regular CO2 tank.
  • Built in stereo amplifier with two 2-way speakers.
  • Internal mainteance free battery, run time over 6h without charge. External wall charger or solar panel charger.
  • 12VDC lighter outlet with optional dual USB port adapter. You can charge your phone or small device with the cooler.
  • Audio imput from regular stereo jack plug or BlueTooth devices (external bluetooth adapter).
  • Built in clock, internal&external digital thermometer and battery charge monitor.
  • White board for displaying the beers on tap
Using the bluetooth adapter is pretty cool, you can play your favorite songs remotelly from your cellphone's play list or Pandora station. It also allows you to control the box volume from your cellphone.
While connected using the stereo jack to your cell phone, it will also work as a hands free device. You can take or make calls from your cooler, how cool is that? If connected with Bluetooth though, it will not provide a duplex capability, so people will not be able to hear you, unless you are doing a voice over IP call like yahoo, skype, etc

Two Taps:

White board and charging connector:

Power switch and lighter socket/USB port adapter:

Two way speakers:

Audio Amplifier:

Audio input with bluetooth receiver connected:


Digital panel:

Inside views:


CO2 post:


Minimum internal damage:


Video:





Thursday, March 28, 2013

It is Gold.........and Silver!

Cream ale and Mac & Jacks clone recipes scored Gold and Silver at the 2013 Joint Base Lewis-McCord in WA state, an AHA sanctioned competition.






Here are the very brewed recipes:

Cream Ale, 5gal batch
Mash, 60min, 158F
9lb 2 row
1/2lb Belgium biscuit 25L
1/2lb carapils
1lb flaked corn

Boil 60min
1oz hallertau 4% for 60min
1/2 hallertau 4% for 10min
1/2 hallertau 4% for 5min
1 tsp irish moss for 20min

Fermented with S04 at 65F for 9 days

OG=1.052
FG=1.016
ABV%=4.5
IBU=16
SRM=5


Mac & Jacks Clone, 5gals batch

Mash, 60min, 155F
8lb British Pale Ale
1lb Carapils
1lb Crystal 80L
2lb Munich 10L

Boil 60min
3/4oz Centennial 10% for 60min
1/2oz Cascade 6% for 15min
1/2oz Cascade 6% for 0min

Fermented with WY1098 British Ale at 65F for 7 days. This was a yeast cake from a previous batch. Usually, this fermentation takes 2 week to complete but the cake speeded it up and also provided a lower FG.

Dry hopping in keg
1oz Cascade 6%

Note. I added Calcium Chloride and Epson salt as usual to provide some calcium and magnesium, as I usually do for my very soft water, but this recipe I also added 7g of Baking soda to increase sweetness perception (read this somewhere). Not sure if that played any role in the score.

OG=1.056
FG=1.012
ABV%=5.8
IBU=30
SRM=14

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Updated - Mac & Jack's African Amber Clone

Update 4/22/13: Full list of recipes can be found here.

This is an update to the recipe, 3rd I tried so far.

5gal batch.
British Pale Ale - 8lb
Carapils - 1lb
Crystal 80L - 1lb
Munich 10L - 2lb
Mashed at 155 for 60min
Centennial 10%  - 3/4oz for 60min
Cascade 6% - 1/2oz for 15min
Cascade 6% - 1/2oz at flame out
Cascade 6% - 1oz dry hop in keg
Wyeast 1098 British Ale fermented at 65F
OG=1.056
FG=1.012
ABV%=5.8
IBU=30
SRM=14

This beer tasted much better than the first attempt. Sweetness and bitterness were balanced for my palate. I still think the real beer has more IBU's, but I don't mind the way it is now. Perhaps using Magnum hops instead of Centennial would give that long last bitterness that the real beer has.