27.03.08 - Spacemaker IPA

Had a good one? Tell us about it here - and don't forget - we like pictures!
SteveD

Post by SteveD » Sun Apr 13, 2008 11:53 pm

Right, can I do this while I'm pissed.. :lol: :cry:

The IPA was down from OG1070 to about G1011 in 6 days (2nd April) and I dropped the temperature in the beer fridge to help the yeast settle out. It's finished up between 10 and 11 - to spec for a traditional IPA. They were well attenuated brews. At the same time Simonds bitter, which I was having fermentation trouble with was still busy fermenting at G1013. I didn't want that to go much lower so I thought I'd retard the fermentation by dropping the fridge to 5c and encourage the yeast to settle out.

Being unusually busy, I'd left the blow off setup in place on the IPA, and I thought that the reduction in gas pressure in the FV as the temp dropped might draw some water from the jug up the tube some way back towards the FV, but with over 2' head there would be no problems......

...wrong! :cry: Here's the Darwin Award for brewing!!!

Tonight when I went to get the FV out for kegging - I saw that all the skanky trub and yeast laden exposed to the air plain tap water that had been sitting in the blow off jug in the beer fridge since 27th March had all been siphoned back into the FV - about 1.5 litres.....oh holy crap!

Once the despair subsided, I decided to keg it anyway and see what happens. If any beer can fight off a potential infection, it's a traditional IPA. So, 1oz/30g of dry hops in a bag weighed down with a stainless steel weight into the cornie in preparation for racking. At the same time attempt to change the poppet valve on the gas post because it was leaking on the last brew (March Beers 1061), only to find (after a struggle to get it out) that the replacements I've got with the yellow bit are different to the valve incumbent. Arse! I re-seated the original valve and it's sealing ok now. Maybe a bit of crud got stuck there, who knows.

Partly owing to the unwanted increase in brewlength and because there was originally 23L of the stuff anyway I decided to bottle some out of the fermenter as well. Go to prepare priming syrup, and the microwave packs up...someone up there doesn't like me. :cry: resort to boiling it in a pan on the stove.

Anyway, I had a beer and primed a couple of quart bottles, kegged a cornie full, and the bottles, and looked at the 3 or so litres remaining in the FV, quickly starsan'd another quart bottle and filled it....forgetting to prime it first....I'll do it later. :roll:

Anyway, ordinarily I'd tip the rest away, but this is not ordinary beer. It's fairly clear-ish, and tastes really nice albeit very bitter - there's a big orangey (goldings) hop flavour that's very moreish and the high bitterness is not unpleasant, as a result of bittering with low alpha hops... so, I decanted the rest into pint glasses and am chugging my way through as we speak - and at 7.8% abv I'm fairly arseholed - I can't feel my finges on the kwmputer keys. :lol:

If it does go off, at least I had some of it. :) What's saddening is that if it does go bad, it contains most of my 2007 hop harvest :cry:

We shall see....

I'll have to brew another one soon in case this one doesn't work out :)

User avatar
Oggy' Bar
Hollow Legs
Posts: 367
Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 10:03 pm
Location: Near lancaster

Post by Oggy' Bar » Mon Apr 14, 2008 12:31 am

It'll probably turn out a cracker Steve D...Not doin so bad on the cmpter misself....consideringh :lol:

SteveD

Post by SteveD » Mon Apr 14, 2008 12:37 am

aaaw mate, you pisshed too? :)

Just finished my alcohol, hop, and vit-B overload and off to hit the sack. The finish on the IPA is huge, still tasting it half an hour after the last drop. :)

iowalad
Under the Table
Posts: 1120
Joined: Wed Dec 13, 2006 3:22 am
Location: Iowa

Post by iowalad » Mon Apr 14, 2008 1:06 am

Somehow I missed this one when it was brewed.
A real hop/malt monster!

How well does hop aroma (late additon and dry hop) hold up with the extended aging?

User avatar
Ditch
Five figured forum fanatic
Posts: 11380
Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2012 5:22 pm
Location: Co. Leitrim.
Contact:

Post by Ditch » Mon Apr 14, 2008 4:10 am

:shock: Matra Dea! " And so; To Bed " too, by the sounds of that one!

So Many Hops; I'd have loved a sip; Just for the taste / experience.

Hope it keeps and becomes a Legend for ye :)

oblivious

Post by oblivious » Mon Apr 14, 2008 7:10 am

Very nice :D

prodigal2

Post by prodigal2 » Mon Apr 14, 2008 8:50 am

Between the hops and the high ABV I think you will get away with it 8)

User avatar
spearmint-wino
CBA prizewinner 2007
Posts: 1039
Joined: Sat Mar 10, 2007 9:08 am
Location: Nunhead, Sarf Lahndun

Post by spearmint-wino » Mon Apr 14, 2008 10:30 am

I was talking to him about the very same thing last week - he weighs the dry hop bag down with some stainless nuts and bolts so it sinks down next to the bottom of the dip tube and every bit you draw off gets drawn through the hops. You'd need quite a few though - I tried it recently and the bag wouldn't sink, even with weights! :shock:

drinking: ~ | conditioning: ~ | primary: ~ | Looks like I need to get brewing then...
Visit London Amateur Brewers online

SteveD

Post by SteveD » Mon Apr 14, 2008 9:35 pm

spearmint-wino wrote:I was talking to him about the very same thing last week - he weighs the dry hop bag down with some stainless nuts and bolts so it sinks down next to the bottom of the dip tube and every bit you draw off gets drawn through the hops. You'd need quite a few though - I tried it recently and the bag wouldn't sink, even with weights! :shock:
James, or Dougal, north of the border? Yep, he weighs his down. I used to let them float in top tap king kegs for the same reason, though in a cornie you can roll it periodically to distribute the flavour. I used the steel grommet that they use to weigh down the flat rectangular king keg float, and that has no trouble holding down the 30g Goldings I used.

I'm hoping I get away with it. I did put a few campden tabs in the jug water at the start, and the jug and blowoff tube were also sterile. All it had done was sit in the beer fridge so maybe, just maybe, it might be ok.

I'm going to brew another one anyway, just in case. It's a bloody expensive beer to make - at current prices about £30 on hops and malt alone! nearly a £1 a pint on just that. Still, it'll be worth it if it survives.

SteveD

Post by SteveD » Mon Apr 14, 2008 9:39 pm

iowalad wrote:Somehow I missed this one when it was brewed.
A real hop/malt monster!

How well does hop aroma (late additon and dry hop) hold up with the extended aging?
I've tasted one at 18 months old that had an aroma and flavour as if you'd stuck your head in a sack of fresh hops - one of James's. Even long after the PET bottle was empty you just kept squeezing and sniffing it :)

oblivious

Post by oblivious » Mon Apr 14, 2008 9:40 pm

SteveD wrote: Even long after the PET bottle was empty you just kept squeezing and sniffing it :)
You could sell that to hop hop head to get them through work :D

User avatar
spearmint-wino
CBA prizewinner 2007
Posts: 1039
Joined: Sat Mar 10, 2007 9:08 am
Location: Nunhead, Sarf Lahndun

Post by spearmint-wino » Mon Apr 14, 2008 9:49 pm

SteveD wrote:James, or Dougal, north of the border?
Ooops, don't know what happened there... maybe I didn't see the 2nd page of the thread :oops: anyway I was talking about James. Doh! Hope the beer's a belter anyway 8)

drinking: ~ | conditioning: ~ | primary: ~ | Looks like I need to get brewing then...
Visit London Amateur Brewers online

SteveD

Post by SteveD » Mon Apr 28, 2008 1:38 am

Hope so. First it's got to survive the ingress of claggwater, second, it's got to be a belter :)

Bottles have cleared down beautifully - now, just got to wait until Christmas at least...... tick follows tock :roll:

Jrevillug

Post by Jrevillug » Mon Apr 28, 2008 11:04 pm

...follows tick follows tock follows tick follows tock...

Nice brew there. I hope it works out OK - after all, it is a beer designed to be robust.

SteveD

Post by SteveD » Mon Apr 28, 2008 11:26 pm

Jrevillug wrote:...follows tick follows tock follows tick follows tock...

Nice brew there. I hope it works out OK - after all, it is a beer designed to be robust.
That's my feeling too, so fingers crossed. I brewed another just in case. Can't have too much IPA about the place. :)

Post Reply