AG# 31 Tribute 1 (with pics)

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fego
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AG# 31 Tribute 1 (with pics)

Post by fego » Tue Jan 03, 2012 6:19 pm

This is my first attempt at cloning St. Austell's Tribute Ale with the recipe based on Chrisr's recipe here viewtopic.php?f=5&t=8952&hilit=tribute& ... 55#p474653.

Actual recipe used...

Pale Malt - 3940 grams (82.5%)
Munich Malt - 835 grams (17.5%)

Fuggle - 60 mins boil 67 grams
Willamette - steeped for 60 mins @ 80C - 25 grams
Styrian Goldings - steeped for 60 mins @ 80C - 25 grams

Yeast - cultivated from bottle of St. Austell's Admiral's Ale.

I did this yesterday alongside taking down the Christmas decs so it was a bit of a busy day. Still, it went well and I only had two problems; 1) I dropped a sack of Malt everywhere and 2) The blocks I use to raise my HLT fell into the copper mid boil splashing me. I also had a moment with my refractometer telling me lies and making me panic, but that was later put down to me leaving it in the cold. Here's some pictures of the day.

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Recipe and water treatment notes

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Whoops!

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Grain Bill and mash salts adorned with an empty from the night before.

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Brew day hops/salts all measured out and labelled

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Cultivated yeast being readied

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Brewery being set up

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Mash Liquor being measured (accounting for dead space)

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Measuring out CRS

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Mixing grain and salts

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Checking Strike temperature

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Doughing in

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Mash temp 68C

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Measuring Sparge Water

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Checking sparge water temp

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Fly sparging

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First runnings (after small recirc)

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Adding salts to boiler

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Catching final runnings for gravity check

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Hydrometer reading of final runnings (all good above 3 but has scare earlier when hydrometer was cold)

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Measuring pre-boil volume at point of hot break

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Adding copper hops

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Boil done and chiller in and cooled to 80C - Aroma hops added

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Steeping hops @80C for one hour

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Chiller back on. I normally use two chillers but the water was so cold I only needed one.

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Copper tilted forward in prep for run off and spout wiped with sanitised cloth (also ran several litres through spout during boil to kill nasties)

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FV and tools sanitised

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Checking final run off temp and break material

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First run off yuk

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Very next glass run off is remarkably clear

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Pitching cultivated yeast

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Cleaned man fridge/incubator

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Some of the leftovers

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Exceeded target volume 25L

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Just under target OG at 1.042

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All hooked up for temp controlled fermentation.

Wort tasted lovely and was very clear. I was very happy with the day and hope this tastes as good as it looks.
Last edited by fego on Tue Feb 07, 2012 9:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Tea is for mugs...

haz66

Re: AG# 31 Trybute 1 (with pics)

Post by haz66 » Tue Jan 03, 2012 10:03 pm

Looks like a good brewday there fego, nice pics.

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StrangeBrew
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Re: AG# 31 Trybute 1 (with pics)

Post by StrangeBrew » Tue Jan 03, 2012 10:45 pm

Enjoyed that, well done!

Did Tribute myself early in 2010 and you have inspired me to give it another go in the near future.

leedsbrew

Re: AG# 31 Trybute 1 (with pics)

Post by leedsbrew » Tue Jan 03, 2012 10:57 pm

nice one matey! :D

barney

Re: AG# 31 Trybute 1 (with pics)

Post by barney » Tue Jan 03, 2012 11:13 pm

Super system you got there. :D

WishboneBrewery
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Re: AG# 31 Trybute 1 (with pics)

Post by WishboneBrewery » Wed Jan 04, 2012 8:26 am

what a shed load of photos, excellent stuff.

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phatboytall
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Re: AG# 31 Trybute 1 (with pics)

Post by phatboytall » Fri Jan 13, 2012 2:41 pm

Let us know how this tastes! I don't know if it was just the sunshine in cornwall but i remember drinking this stuff on a stag do a few summers ago and thinking it was a pretty cracking quaffing beer.

Since had it a few times and been underwhelmed, but its on my list as a potentially great homebrew beer. Beef up the Willamette and Styians a bit :twisted:
I am not a Beer expert.....thats exactly the point.

Check out my blog where i review bottled beers
http://www.thebeerbunker.co.uk/ or find me on twitter @thebeerbunker

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fego
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Re: AG# 31 Tribute 1 (with pics)

Post by fego » Tue Feb 07, 2012 10:40 pm

Have now started drinking this after a few tasters to see how it has matured.

First things first, this beer isn't one to be drunk green. It's not nice green and takes a full three weeks before its drinkable at all. I honestly thought it had an infection at first but having left it a bit and tasted the odd sample here and there, it has improved massively. In fact it's delicious but not unimprovable.

The flavour is very balanced and extremely close to a well stored cask Tribute, but nothing like a bottled Tribute. It's much better than the bottled version which is a totally different drink altogether. The malt is slightly sweet but not in a sticky way, just nice but not full or overly flavoured. The hops shine through however and I think that's down to the dry finish the St. Austell yeast produces. The flavour is all in the back of the mouth offering a very chewy experience and a delightful mouthfeel. It's almost as if you're biting into it and having a mouthful of it creates such a pleasant experience that you can't help but smile with enjoyment.

I'm amazed at the outcome and I can tell that with a couple more weeks it will improve further. As I said however, I'm sure there's still room to make it even better or, as intended, even closer to the real thing. First, the colour is a bit paler than the original. Secondly, I think the bittering level could be increased a bit just to give an even more striking contrast to the malt's sweetness. And maybe even increase the aroma hops a tad just to add yet more flavour. The one thing I wouldn't change is the yeast which worked really well getting the wort down to 1.008 no trouble.

Im planning to do a taste test with the real thing in a couple of weeks so it will interesting how it really compares. In the meantime, this is a smashing beer which has got the thumbs up from everyone who has tried it, which is a first for me.
Tea is for mugs...

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