Mount Cook Ale

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yashicamat
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Mount Cook Ale

Post by yashicamat » Sat Jun 06, 2009 7:40 pm

Now the exams are finally over, back to work . . . 8)

Picked up a pack of Nelson Sauvin 2008 hops a few months back from the LHBS and I've been waiting for ages to do a nice IPA with them. Today was the day, so I came up with this pretty simple single hop recipe (based on similar beers from both Garth's Nelson Sauvin Ale and Alasdair's (adm) Nelson's Gem):

23 litre brew length (25 in boiler)

4609g low colour Maris Otter
307g wheat malt
204g vienna malt

60 min mash

19g Nelson Sauvin 11.5% AA for 60 mins
58g Nelson Sauvin 11.5% AA for 15 mins
23g Nelson Sauvin 11.5% AA 80 deg C steep (20 mins ish)

(these hops smell incredible!)

2 x packets of US-05

Came out with the exact predicted OG of 1055 (seem to have my efficiency nailed now, am always within a point of predicted OG 8) ) and I am expecting good attenuation with two packets of US-05, so probably looking at about 1010 or so FG. This one will be going into bottles and left to mature for a bit. Hopefully this should lock in the hoppy goodness too. :)

Really enjoyable brewday (best use of rainy weather!) and even managed a respectable 5.5 hours from HLT being switched on to putting the kit away.
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

Cheshire-cheese

Re: Mount Cook Ale

Post by Cheshire-cheese » Sat Jun 06, 2009 10:02 pm

5.5 hours? Now that's brewing efficiency =D>
What power is your HLT? I'm slowed down by 1.8kW (poor workman an' all that)

adm

Re: Mount Cook Ale

Post by adm » Sat Jun 06, 2009 10:19 pm

Good stuff Rob....that's going to be a nice beer.

I love those Nelson Sauvin hops - they are just packed with complex flavour. I noticed Craftbrewer have new season (although being as they are on the other side of the world, does that mean late 2008/early 2009??) flower hops in.....might be time for a new order from Ross soon.

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yashicamat
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Re: Mount Cook Ale

Post by yashicamat » Sun Jun 07, 2009 12:22 am

Cheshire-cheese wrote:5.5 hours? Now that's brewing efficiency =D>
What power is your HLT? I'm slowed down by 1.8kW (poor workman an' all that)
The HLT has two 2.4kw elements in I split across the kitchen ring and the rest of the house (demand is a tad high to load onto just one ring).
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

DarloDave

Re: Mount Cook Ale

Post by DarloDave » Sun Jun 07, 2009 12:25 am

I've got a pack of these to use at some point, the bottle I tried off Garth of these hops was amazing.

Cheshire-cheese

Re: Mount Cook Ale

Post by Cheshire-cheese » Sun Jun 07, 2009 7:48 am

yashicamat wrote:
Cheshire-cheese wrote:5.5 hours? Now that's brewing efficiency =D>
What power is your HLT? I'm slowed down by 1.8kW (poor workman an' all that)
The HLT has two 2.4kw elements in I split across the kitchen ring and the rest of the house (demand is a tad high to load onto just one ring).
What a beast of a HLT! I'm beginning to see the benefit of making one's own. One day perhaps

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yashicamat
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Re: Mount Cook Ale

Post by yashicamat » Sun Jun 07, 2009 9:13 am

Cheshire-cheese wrote:What a beast of a HLT! I'm beginning to see the benefit of making one's own. One day perhaps
Really quite cheap to make actually. I used a Ritchie fermenting bin (as they're polypropylene so safe to use with boiling water) - about £10 I think, maybe less. Then I pulled apart two £4.88 Tesco Value kettles. Didn't have a big drill bit for the holes, so just did a ring of 4mm holes then used a junior hacksaw blade and went around it by hand to cut it out. Quick blast with the heat gun and a bit of pushing about to flatten the plastic a bit so the elements fitted in nicely.

Most expensive bit was actually the ball valve assembly. 1/4" ball valve, stainless fittings (1/4" BSP to 1/4" BSP male to male, then a backnut to mount the valve into the HLT wall) then there was a brass 1/4" BSP to 8mm compression fitting on the other side to fit to a short length of copper microbore tube to, which is angled down at the end like a tap. I just slide some plastic tubing onto this and route it anywhere I want.

Total cost for the fittings was probably about £15 I expect, but they'll last forever and the ball valve offers excellent control which I find invaluable for my unconventional method of fly sparging. You could use a blacktop drum tap instead, they're about £5, so all in a 4.8kw HLT shouldn't set you back much away from £25. :)

Only remaining expense are two power cables capable of withstanding the load, but I just use the two that came with the H&G boiler as the boiler and HLT don't need to be on at the same time. :)
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

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yashicamat
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Re: Mount Cook Ale

Post by yashicamat » Tue Jun 09, 2009 8:26 pm

Seems to have finished already. :shock: Yeast head which usually lingers with US-05 has been and gone! Will take an SG reading tomorrow, but I think it's actually finished completely. Obviously a combination of a nice yeast-friendly wort and two packs of US-05 being pitched! 8)
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

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yashicamat
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Joined: Wed Oct 15, 2008 8:04 pm
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Re: Mount Cook Ale

Post by yashicamat » Thu Jun 11, 2009 9:17 pm

Gravity check - 1009. Not expecting it to drop anymore so will bottle tomorrow.

Drinking the hydrometer jar sample now - very nice indeed. Exactly what I was aiming for, although it will definately benefit from a good month of maturing. Reminds me a lot of how my Cascades IPA tasted initially and that one turned out well. The signature NS taste is there, with a pleasant bitterness and a good aroma.

Can't wait. :D
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

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