Winter Ale - Old Timer?

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deadlydes

Post by deadlydes » Fri Nov 10, 2006 5:26 pm

Garth wrote:Eldridge Pope Thomas Hardy's Ale

there is also a whole pages on notes on how to brew this ale, cause of it being a bit of a monster, I will copy it if anyone needs it
WOW just looked at this in detail. any chance of those detailed instructions since i have never brewed anything like this.
may have a go for the craic

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Garth
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Post by Garth » Fri Nov 10, 2006 5:49 pm

oh bugger, I wish I hadn't told you about the extra bit, damn

ah well, while the Bluebird brew is boiling, more aching hands,

Brewing Notes for Thomas Hardy's Ale:

Our vessels are not big enough to brew efficiently 23 litres of ans OG 1125 ale. The obvious answer to the prob. is to brew a smaller batch. Homebrew shops sell 2.5 gallon barrels, and this volume is just about as much as we can achieve at such a strength.

You will need two types of yeast, a 2.5 gallon barrel for maturation, and 60 nip bottles or 40 half pint bottles. if you can't get the amber replace it with pale.

Mash and sparge as a normal beer, but stop sparging when you have collected about 15 litres.

Boil for a min. of 90 mins but long enough to reduce the volume to 12 litres, or less.

Cool the wort and then adjust to OG 1125 with water in the ferm. vessel. You should have about 12 litres of wort.

Aerate and pitch with a high quality English Ale yeast.

Monitor SG carefully and if the fermentation gets stuck, ie stops before about 1035, rack the beer off the yeast into another ferm. vessel, and re-pitch with a wine yeast. If a wine yeast is used then fit the lid and airlock to the vessel.

When fermentation has abated, rack the beer off the yeast into a 2.5 gallon barrel and add a sachet of wine yeast to the barrel. Fit the cap, put the barrel away somewhere and forget about it for 3 months.

After three months recover the barrel and rack into a sterilised ferm. vessel on to 50 grams of sugar and a 5 gram sachet of wine yeast. Ensure that the wine yeast, sugar and beer get well mixed, but try to ensure that a minimum of air gets dissolved into the beer.

Bottle the beer and cap. Store for a minimum of one year. Reputedly at it's best at five years.

...phew

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Garth
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Post by Garth » Sat Nov 11, 2006 9:58 am

exactly what I was thinking as I was typing it, you would be gutted, and its for that reason I ain't doing it...

mr bond

Post by mr bond » Fri Aug 24, 2007 10:04 am

Hey garth any chance of posting the Old Genie recipe?

Cheers
Dave

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Garth
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Post by Garth » Fri Aug 24, 2007 8:43 pm

no probs bondy, I'll just dig it out, thanks for the pm, I might not have seen this for a while

ok found it. Brewed by the Big Lamp Brewery just 20 mins from me


Big Lamp Old Genie

OG 1068

Pale malt 5,800g
Crystal malt 340g
Black Malt 220g

Invert cane sugar 740g
Fuggles 73g (start of boil)
Goldings 41g (start of boil)
Goldings 15g (last 15)
Fuggles 5g (dry hop)

Mash liquor 16 litres
Mash temp 67'C
Mash time 2 hrs
Boil time 2 hrs
Alc 67.4 %
FG 1013
44 EBU
Final vol 23 litres

let us know if you do it and how it turns out, seems a good time to make it now and lay it down for those cold winters you get down there... :D

mr bond

Post by mr bond » Sat Aug 25, 2007 12:13 am

Cheers Garth,

My interest was peaked when I read this thread

http://www.aussiehomebrewer.com/forum/i ... 10273&st=0

Searched up here and got this thread.

I've got one mashing now that is very similar,only I'm using a combo of challenger and fuggle.Add a little sugar to get it into the 8% realm.
Will ferment out with Nottingham.

Plan is to try one a month over 2 years.

Dave.

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