Brew Experiment: IPA

Hey, that night brewing the two batches of IPA, where we added hops at ‘knock out’ vs. the ‘dry hop’ was a great idea and fun to taste.  Not sure what you whangs, oh sorry, I meant Mr. Whangs thought about the beers, but I think I surprisingly enjoyed the ‘knock out’ batch more than the ‘dry hop’ batch.  As hop nature boy from my tour of duty in Seattle, I was surprised.

What about your opinions?  Post your comments.

Also, do we have the recipe for these batches?  Let’s post them.  I know, right after you send the other beer recipes for our archive.

“So you added hops at the knock out, that’s so smart…and dreamy.”

Competition 1: The Results

Congrats to Captain Scott, Jeff and the new Andrew for their big win at the first competition tasting for the 2012 Lake Bluff Homebrew Club.  Their ‘sweet stout’ was the winner with by far the best mouthfeel, a key category for this style. The aptly named team ‘Scotty McBassmeyer’ (aka Angus Macqueerfart) rocked the competition with the idea to match the water of their brew to that of Dublin.

Scott with two back-to-back wins as Captain, your man-card is out front sir.

The 2nd-5th place beers were all good and very close bunching of scores.  Second place went to Andrew and Drew ; Mike and Mike in 3rd; Leif and TK in 4th and Dave and Craig 5th.

Next beer style is the ‘Imperial IPA’ and remember we are using the BJCP guidelines for this style!

Meeting: April 2012

Thanks to brew club alumnus Kris for hosting yet another rousing brew night.  We ended up crafting a new style, a Belgian Tripel (thanks Dave) that looked to hit all the numbers.  Should be a good, potent summer beer.

Example of Belgian Triples

Example of Belgian Triples

Glad we made time to talk about the Tripel and brewing.  It is important to make time to talk about beer so thanks to Dave for taking the reigns on that too.  For more information on Belgian Tripels, please see the right nav bar for this beer style.

Another fun evening and I know we need to get better focus on the actually brewing.  We seem to split up duties well.  Of course it was 12:30 am Wednesday when several of us left too.

We talked about the charity idea some too.  Seems like the guys are still interested and some of the ideas of brewing a small batch of Homebrew Club beer (double batch?), for a limited time, had some legs.  I think.  Worth further discussion.

Next meeting is the Competition Tasting for beer style #1.  Get ready to rumble.

 

 

Competition: NEW Beer Specs

It was decided at Dave’s meeting to change the beer specs from GABF to BJCP.  Here are the NEW beer specs.  Read this.  Yes, this means you.Seal of approval

Here is the main link to BJCP beer styles:

http://www.bjcp.org/2008styles/catdex.php

The NEXT competition beer using this NEW spec profile will be the Imperial IPA.  Here is the link:

http://www.bjcp.org/2008styles/style14.php#1c

I’d like to get the Club’s input on the Rye category and Open beer category (Speciality beer/23?)  Let’s discuss.

Here is the BJCP info for Imperial IPA for those lazier than thou:

14C. Imperial IPA

Aroma: A prominent to intense hop aroma that can be derived from American, English and/or noble varieties (although a citrusy hop character is almost always present). Most versions are dry hopped and can have an additional resinous or grassy aroma, although this is not absolutely required. Some clean malty sweetness may be found in the background. Fruitiness, either from esters or hops, may also be detected in some versions, although a neutral fermentation character is typical. Some alcohol can usually be noted, but it should not have a “hot” character.

Appearance: Color ranges from golden amber to medium reddish copper; some versions can have an orange-ish tint. Should be clear, although unfiltered dry-hopped versions may be a bit hazy. Good head stand with off-white color should persist.

Flavor: Hop flavor is strong and complex, and can reflect the use of American, English and/or noble hop varieties. High to absurdly high hop bitterness, although the malt backbone will generally support the strong hop character and provide the best balance. Malt flavor should be low to medium, and is generally clean and malty although some caramel or toasty flavors are acceptable at low levels. No diacetyl. Low fruitiness is acceptable but not required. A long, lingering bitterness is usually present in the aftertaste but should not be harsh. Medium-dry to dry finish. A clean, smooth alcohol flavor is usually present. Oak is inappropriate in this style. May be slightly sulfury, but most examples do not exhibit this character.

Mouthfeel: Smooth, medium-light to medium body. No harsh hop-derived astringency, although moderate to medium-high carbonation can combine to render an overall dry sensation in the presence of malt sweetness. Smooth alcohol warming.

Overall Impression: An intensely hoppy, very strong pale ale without the big maltiness and/or deeper malt flavors of an American barleywine. Strongly hopped, but clean, lacking harshness, and a tribute to historical IPAs. Drinkability is an important characteristic; this should not be a heavy, sipping beer. It should also not have much residual sweetness or a heavy character grain profile.

Comments: Bigger than either an English or American IPA in both alcohol strength and overall hop level (bittering and finish). Less malty, lower body, less rich and a greater overall hop intensity than an American Barleywine. Typically not as high in gravity/alcohol as a barleywine, since high alcohol and malt tend to limit drinkability. A showcase for hops.

History: A recent American innovation reflecting the trend of American craft brewers “pushing the envelope” to satisfy the need of hop aficionados for increasingly intense products. The adjective “Imperial” is arbitrary and simply implies a stronger version of an IPA; “double,” “extra,” “extreme,” or any other variety of adjectives would be equally valid.

Ingredients: Pale ale malt (well-modified and suitable for single-temperature infusion mashing); can use a complex variety of hops (English, American, noble). American yeast that can give a clean or slightly fruity profile. Generally all-malt, but mashed at lower temperatures for high attenuation. Water character varies from soft to moderately sulfate.

Vital Statistics: OG: 1.070 – 1.090
IBUs: 60 – 120 FG: 1.010 – 1.020
SRM: 8 – 15 ABV: 7.5 – 10%

Commercial Examples: Russian River Pliny the Elder, Three Floyd’s Dreadnaught, Avery Majaraja, Bell’s Hop Slam, Stone Ruination IPA, Great Divide Hercules Double IPA, Surly Furious, Rogue I2PA, Moylan’s Hopsickle Imperial India Pale Ale, Stoudt’s Double IPA, Dogfish Head 90-minute IPA, Victory Hop Wallop

Meeting Recap: March 13th

Big thanks to Dave for hosting the double brew bonanza.  Some cool idea on testing and tasting different hop additions.  Good ideas fellas.

FIrst off, what a club!  The club as individuals is brewing some great beers.  Enjoyed Andrew O’s Witt bier.  Scott brought a tasty IPA.  Dave’s on tap versions, as always, were full-bodied and most quaffable.  Well done fellas.Hop in the city...

The brewing seemed to go well.  With Leif and Mike B. kicking in the brew stewardship, I have to say I enjoyed quaffing a few pints.  Craig, well done sir on the brewing too.

The new kids were missing and I am too tired to come up with anything other than I hope these whangs don’t turn out to be the Milli Vanilli of home brewers :-)

Something major for the beer competition:   it was decided that from now on we will follow the BJCP guidelines vs. the GABF.  Probably a smart idea to follow the homebrew vs. ‘big time’ guidelines.  It will be interesting to see how different the specs turn out to be.

Distributed Drew’s RyePA; quaffing one now as I write this.  Most enjoyable.  Great Amber color and the Rye seemed to be a good foil to the hop bitterness, which I didn’t notice but I think this is a beer that will age well.  Think I will wait two weeks before cracking open the 2nd.  Great head retention. Hmmm, that could be a t-shirt slogan?

OK, so April 3 is a team brewing week.  Find your time and find your brew.  Check out the blog for the tasting schedule.

I believe the next brewing event is 4/24 at Kris’ house.  The host with the most.

Anything else?

Competition 2012 (Updated)

Here is the info for the 2012 Lake Bluff Homebrew Club Competition.  We will follow a similar format to 2011.  The GABF Style Guidelines will be our framework and the point system will also follow the Homebrew Assoc. standards.  Looking forward to tasting some great beers again in 2012.

Please note: we changed from GABF Guidelines for the 1st Beer (Stout) and will be using the BJCP Guidelines for competition beers #2, #3, and #4.

Don't be the odd man out, get involved with your team!

1) The four styles for 2012 are:

Sweet Stout

Imperial IPA

Rye Beer

Open Style/U Pick

2) Tasting Competition Calendar.  Your beers need to be ready for the tasting on the following dates.  You need to plan your team’s brew calendar to meet these Tasting/due dates!

Milk Stout: May 15th

Imperial IPA: August 28th

Rye Beer:  October 9th

Open Style/U Pick:  December 7th

3) Beer Specs

Beer 1:     78. Sweet Stout (GABF guidelines)

Sweet stouts, also referred to as cream stouts, have less roasted bitter flavor and a full-bodied mouthfeel. The style can be given more body with milk sugar (lactose) before bottling. Malt sweetness, chocolate, and caramel flavor should dominate the flavor profile and contribute to the aroma. Hops should balance and suppress some of the sweetness without contributing apparent flavor or aroma. The overall impression should be sweet and full-bodied.

Original Gravity (oPlato): 1.045–1.056 (11.3–14 oPlato) ␣ Apparent Extract/Final Gravity (oPlato): 1.012– 1.020 (3–5 oPlato) ␣ Alcohol by Weight (Volume): 2.5–5% (3–6%) ␣ Bitterness (IBU): 15–25 ␣ Color SRM (EBC): 40+ (80+ EBC)

For Beers 2,3,and 4 see Post with BJCP links–it was getting too confusing on this page

For the Beer #4 (Open Style), the idea here is to pick a style, preferably something we haven’t done for Competition or for Homebrew and create it.  In July, you will need to provide a sealed document with your beer style and specs you are trying to hit.  This will be how we judge it.

Kind of wacky, but that goes with the territory here.

Calendar for 2012

Per meeting from Drew’s house, here is the tentative homebrew schedule for 2012.  Thanks to Scott for taking such good notes.

 Wk Event Brew
31-Jan Club Night – Drew Black RyePA
21-Feb Competition Brewing Window Milk (Sweet) Stout – GABF #78
13-Mar Club Night – Dave 2 batch experiment?
3-Apr Competition Brewing Window Imperial IPA – GABF #52
24-Apr Club Night – Guest Host Atzeff TBD
15-May Club Night – Michael G? Competition Tasting – Milk Stout
5-Jun Competition Brewing Window Open Style
26-Jun Club Night – Mike B? TBD
17-Jul Club Night – Scott 2 batch experiment?
7-Aug Competition Brewing Window Rye Beer – GABF #10A
28-Aug Club Night Competition Tasting – Imperial IPA
18-Sep Club Night TBD
9-Oct Club Night Competition Tasting – Rye
30-Oct Club Night TBD
20-Nov Club Night TBD
7-Dec 4th Annual Holiday Melee – Innovasi Competition Tasting – Open Style