Archive for the Brewing Category

The Seventh of May, Two Thousand and Thirteen

Posted in Brewing, Daily Pictures, Good Times with tags on May 15, 2013 by Verge

Every first Tuesday of the month, Monika and I have a Barley Legal Homebrewers meeting.  Since the meeting is closer to work than our home, we decided to meet for dinner before we headed to the meeting.

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Normally we grab dinner or a least a bite to eat at Iron Hill in Maple Shade. But, before the meetings, it gets really crowded at the bar, so instead, we met at Champps Americana. They have great veggie burgers and great beer.

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Then, to Iron Hill for our meeting. This month our meeting was actually a testing session for Philly Beer Geek competition. We all participated, and had more fun than business as usual.

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and, of course, there was beer tasting. Best part may have been our new, customized, Barley Legal King of the Hill Beer Club mugs. And, I won some beer in the raffle, and that’s always a nice thing – leaving with more than I came with.

AHA Big Brew Day 2012 Flashback

Posted in Brewing with tags , on April 26, 2013 by Verge

all photos courtesy and copyright 2012 Larry Wagstaff

Barley Legal Home Brewers Adventure to Troegs Brewery

Posted in Brewing, Good Times with tags , , on April 13, 2013 by Verge
no matter the angle, I still love the Philly skyline

As always, my home brew club’s all day party/brewery tour started in South Jersey and at an awful time in the morning.

Holy Shit!

It barely matters how long the journey will last, it’s divided in to three distinct parts, at least for me: This is part I – THE JOURNEY THERE…

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…Part II – THE FEATURED DESTINATION. We arrived at Troegs Brewery early, and slightly buzzed from the “tasting” on the way. The staff had not yet arrived when we gathered aimlessly in the parking lot. The new pub/brewery destination lives in a shell once owned by the Hershey Corporation, whose history in this area have literally put the address of the new Togs location in Hershey, Pennsylvania.

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Once we got in and started the tour, we got the “special” tour. Normally, regular folks get the run-of-the-mill, scripted plaque, this is kind of how we make beer tour. Not us! This is in their grain storage room, which is pretty boring to 99% of people, but for us nerds, this is where the action starts.

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fermentation tanks, also behind the scenes, because, there’s nothing to see, except it’s like every home brewers dream to have this setup.

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a view of our group.

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this is a shot of Monika, taking a picture of their fancy prototype Randalizer/Hop Rocket. I would like here to an explanation of what that means, but none exists, so I guess that is my next Wikipedia project.

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damn straight a craft beer brewery still uses the real thing.

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well, before they transfer it to the practical things

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Mad Elf a little hard to come by? Not here. They might have told everyone it was sold out, but I call Bullshit. They’re holding out.

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Perennial favorite Nugget Nektar, a lovely little beer.

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a good ol’ bottling line, make me reminisce about Strange Brew!

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their aging and sampling room, which we did not get access to, but I hope to return to someday to sample some of their experimental creations.

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this is at the end of the tour, which for most people, is the beginning, with our gracious tour guide in the background.

and Part III:  the ride home, the part where I sleep because, at the end of  a long day, I have to drive home!

How to Convert a Kegerator to Dispense Home Brew from Corny Kegs

Posted in Brewing, Brewing and Kegging Step-By-Step Instructions with tags on June 26, 2012 by Verge

Working at Keg & Barrel Homebrew Supply, I have many people inquire about the next step in home brew bottling…Kegging.  Fed up with the constant sanitizing, bottling, capping, and waiting the two-three weeks it takes to “bottle-condition” (aka carbonate), many homebrewers turn to Kegging their beer.

And why wouldn’t we?  You have exactly one container to clean and sanitize instead of scores, one lid to put on, only a few hours, instead of weeks, before you can enjoy a carbonated beer (more on that in another column), and possibly the most bad-ass aspect… home brew on tap in your bar.  (When liquor is the center of attention instead of the TV, it’s no longer a Family Room)

Kegging is great, but a traditional Kegerator comes with the type of coupler to tap a standard, domestic, “D” style keg.  How can you convert your system to accommodate your new “Corny Keg” system?  Well, quite easily, and cheaply, in fact. Here’s what you’ll need

Pliers

Scissors

Flat head screwdriver

2x swivel set (either two 3/16″ inch, or one 3/16″ & one 5/16″)

2x tail piece to Male thread adapters

Yep! If you already own a Corny Keg and the taps that fit on the posts, this is literally all you need to convert your kegging system into a dual purpose server. Mind you, you’ll need the Corny taps( whether your keg is pin-lock or ball-lock) that have a MPT (male pipe threaded) tip, not a barbed tip, so make sure you ask for that at your Homebrew Store.

Your Kegerator “coupler” probably looks similar to this. The air line comes in from the side, and the beer is dispensed from the top. The lines on this one are clamped with screw clamps. Even if yours has crimp clamps, no worries. You won’t have to pry them with pliers.

Simply take your scissors and cut the lines near the coupler. Before cutting your air supply line, make sure your regulator is shut off, and the CO2 tank is closed. If you have screw clamps, remove them and save for later.

Now, unscrew the two nuts holding the old tail pieces to the coupler. Under the beer supply at the top, you’ll find a rubber gasket, and under the air supply, you’ll find a check valve. Keep both of those, as well as the nuts. The tubing and the old tail pieces you can either throw out, or slice off the tubing and save for spare parts. You won’t need them anymore for this tutorial.

You’ll now have two open tubes going to your CO2 tank, and your tower and faucet. Insert the swivel set through it’s corresponding nut and into the tubing. Remember to slide the screw clamp over the tubing first so that you can tighten it onto the barb once inserted into the tubing.

Make sure you leave a little space between the tubing and the nut on the swivel set. This is what allows you to be able to tighten the nut without twisting the hose. It’s called “swivel” for a reason.

With those secured in place, simply screw them tight to the taps on your Corny keg and you’re ready to dispense your favorite beverage.

Replace the check valve and gasket on the coupler, and attach the new MPT tailpieces to the coupler. You’re now ready to switch back to the old, traditional coupler when you run out of home brew and want to drink a Miller Lite.

Simply unscrew the air and beer lines from the Corny taps and attach them to the “D” coupler. Tap your favorite brew!

UPDATE!!!  Here's another way to do it, if your homebrew store carries the parts.  You can get tailpieces that fit onto "D" sanke couplers that are Cornelius/homebrew keg posts.

UPDATE!!! Here’s another way to do it, if your home brew store carries the parts. You can get tailpieces that fit onto “D” Sanke couplers that are Cornelius/home brew keg posts.

once screwed on, you'd be able to simply leave your corny disconnects permanently attached to the beer and CO2 lines, and either connect them to a corny keg system, or right onto a regular keg coupler.

Once screwed on, you’d be able to simply leave your corny disconnects permanently attached to the beer and CO2 lines, and either connect them to a corny keg system, or right onto a regular keg coupler.

these posts cost around 40 bucks a set, not including the disconnects seen in this picture, but they save you from having to find a wrench when you want to convert back and forth, and save you a bunch of time as well.  The only advice I can give here is this:  I would still reccoment that you have threaded swivel sets on the beer  line, instead of a barb and clamp.  That way, when in come times to clean out the beer lines, you can simply unscrew the disconnect from the swivel set and run BLC through the lines.

these posts cost around 40 bucks a set, not including the disconnects seen in this picture, but they save you from having to find a wrench when you want to convert back and forth, and save you a bunch of time as well. The only advice I can give here is this: I would still recommend that you have threaded swivel sets on the beer line, instead of a barb and clamp. That way, when in come times to clean out the beer lines, you can simply unscrew the disconnect from the swivel set and run BLC through the lines.

THIS POST HAS BEEN, BY FAR, THE MOST READ POST ON MY BLOG.  PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT TO LET ME KNOW IF MY ADVICE WORKED FOR YOU, AND IF IT WAS HELPFUL.  THANKS AND CHEERS!

Flying Dog Tour Toast

Posted in Brewing, Good Times with tags , on May 8, 2012 by Verge

A few months back, the Barley Legal Homebrewers took a day trip to Flying Dog Brewery in Maryland.  Back then, I didn’t have time to post all the pictures, but I wanted to post this toast, given by our gracious tour guide.  Cheers!

Barley Legal Big Brew Day 2012 – National Homebrew Day

Posted in Brewing, Fermenting, Good Times with tags , , on May 8, 2012 by Verge

Cinco de Mayo.  An annual event that is usually spent at a Mexican Restaurant eating crappy, over-cilantroed chips and salsa and swilling Coronas, Dos Equis and Sol while wearing a loud sombrero and fake, “dirty-mexican” mustache.  In New Jersey, that is.

Need I say anything?

Barley Legal Big Brew Day (aka AHA National Homebrew Day).  An annual event held by my Homebrewers club in Maple Shade on National homebrew day where a few hundred friends get together in a parking lot, make beer all day, and serve for free to anyone that shows up delicious, home made beer.

In 2012, the two collided last Saturday under an overcast sky at Iron Hill Restaurant in Maple Shade, NJ.

Monika, Craig and I left early because we had volunteered for the first hour of admissions desk duty…taking donations, selling raffle tickets, selling merchandise and id’ing and wrist banding all the brewers.

There were about 30 different stations where people were brewing and serving. Club members are pretty ambitious, so everyone set right up and started brewing as fast as you can.

We met up with Gina and Scott from my homebrew store and we had planned to do a joint 12 gallon brew of raspberry cream ale. President Obama showed up as well, started out with a beer, ended up having a few cigarettes, lost the suit for a Barley Legal t-shirt and caught a serious buzz.

One of the assistant brewer’s got up super early and got to Iron Hill to run a batch of Mash for us in the morning. This cuts brewing time for brewer’s in half. Basically, it cuts out the first step, which is basically pouring hot water on grains and waiting for two hours. This is us all lined up to get our sweet wort.

This is a member getting his “keggle” filled. That’s a converted half-barrel keg made into a brew kettle. The smell inside a brewery while mashing and sparging is simply delicious. No, it does not smell like beer. It’s not beer yet!

This still isn’t beer, but it’s a start. We had previously steeped grains, oats and rice and drained them into our keggle. Got it up to a roiling boil and stirred in some hops.

propane, huge amount of boiling water, and drinking high alcohol content beer. It’s amazing there aren’t any accidents on Big Brew Day.

well, almost none. Mike, from Isaac Budd Farm, brewed all day, then dropped the glass jug it was in, and lost it all.

Kreg keeping a close watch on our two keggles…er, one keggle.

This brewer was doing all the brewing himself, as opposed to having the brewery help out with the first step. As you can see, it get’s a little more complicated. But, it sure is a lot of fun.

We tried to finish up early so we could hang out, have some food, give out some of our beers and try some of the other brewers’. On tap, we had an American Cream Ale, Russian Imperial Stout, Magic Hat #9 Clone, and my Iron Brewer Contest entry, a Mint Chocolate Chip Dessert beer.

We mingled for a few hours. Craig, Scott and I smoked a few cigars. Then, the raffles started, and we hung out listening to numbers being announced for an hour or so while prizes were awarded. I didn’t win anything, but I didn’t really try, either.

Kreg found someone with a guitar and jammed on that for a while. I think at this point he was really feeling the scene. Afterwards, we helped clean up the site for about an hour before heading home.

My beer is bubbling away in the kitchen as I type.  Should be ready in about two months.  Just in time for Summer.  Hope it turns out well.  After all, we made it while drinking.  If it does, hope you can try a sample with me!  And, if you weren’t there, try to make it out next year.  It’s always a great time with great people.

Special thanks to Beer-Stained Letter for some of the pictures you see above, and for being the un-official photographer of the day.  And a shout out to Happily Hopped, who kept the first picture up on his blog long enough for me to steal it for mine.

Oh, and another special thanks to the officers of the club:  Evan, Cleteor, Ryan and Devin.  They worked hard as hell to make this all happen.

Brewing my First All-Grain Beer

Posted in Brewing with tags , on January 29, 2012 by Verge

I figured I should step my beer making up a notch, especially since I work in a Homebrew supply store, and I really should know my shit.  The next step up from extract brewing, which is what I was doing in my older posts, is partial mash brewing, or mini-mash.

But, while pondering what I would have to do to make a mini-mash, and knowing my real goal was to step into all-grain, I figured I’d just skip the middle step and go for it.  The differences between these three types of beer making I often equate in difficulty to baking.  Extract brewing is like buying one of those pre-made logs of cookie dough, cutting it up and baking it.  Pretty damn simple and hard to fuck up.

Partial mashing is a bit more difficult.  It’s like buying a box of brownie mix, adding the egg and water to the premixed batch, then baking the resulting glop.  Still pretty hard to ruin, but you might actually have to know complex things like how to crack an egg and use a measuring cup and whisk.

All grain is the most difficult.  That’s like taking you grandmother’s 100 year old recipe for the best chocolate chip cookies ever and making them from scratch.  You measuring out everything yourself.  You need to find the right ingredients and know that baking soda is not baking powder.  2 tsps of salt is definitely not the same as 2 tbsp of salt.  Folding is not mixing, sifting flour is not sprinkling it in.  There is more than 1 type of sugar and confectioners is not raw is not white is not brown.  There are actually vast differences in dark and milk chocolate, and it can be chipped, morsels, shaved or grated.

Yeah, cookies can be that complex, and I’m just scratching the surface.  All-grain beer is like that.  Instead of using pre-measured amounts of grain, hops and yeast, you’re actually crafting beer from it’s raw ingredients completely.  It’s the closest thing to actually brewing like a real brewery a home zymurist can get (unless you live on a farm, grow your own barley and hops, have an oast house and know how to malt grains)

Fist thing I needed to make was a mash tun.  When you make extract beer, all the fermentable sugars are in a can or in powder form, and you simple add them to water.  All-grain requires a brewer to get all those sugars out of the grain themselves, and that is called mashing.  You must add very precise amounts of your grain bill to very specifically amounts of water which have been heated to very specific temperatures.

Luckily, for about 45 bucks, you can get one of these from Home depot. They're big, they hold a lot of hot water, and they keep the temperature fairly constant over a period of time, which is critical in mashing. And, it's exceptionally easy to take off the stock nozzle and replace it with a kettle valve.

on the inside of the kettle valve, you need to install some sort of screen. This one screws into the valve and fits so perfectly into the cooler that it's clear the manufacturers specifically made it for a Home Depot cooler. Amazing!

After mashing grain in the cooler, you need a way to slowly add water as you drain water out. This serves to wash the sugars out of the grain bed, which sounds simple, but can be a disaster under certain circumstances. I decided to get my buddy at work, the machinist, to help me fabricate a "rotating sparge arm" from scratch.

We have a ton of cool toys at the Lab and can pretty much build anything from scratch. Hugh, the guy on the right here, like to make things. If it can be done simply...it's not getting done that way! He like to make things really fancy.

building this thing required some actual precision for it to work properly. I even had to calculate the area of a circle, and got to use Pi for the first time in years.

well, here it is...kind of. this is the sparge arm mounted on the mash tun (removable,and height adjustable, of course). It has yet to be hooked up to the hose and pump.

this is the whole setup. I actually don't have any pictures of it working, because at that time I was not in any position to be taking pictures.

When you step it up into all-grain brews, it really helps to make a "yeast starter." In extract, you go for simplicity and just toss a dry packet of yeast in your beer to start making alcohol. A yeast starter you make the day before. It's like a little tiny batch of beer that gets the yeast multiplying, that way when you pitch it into your all-grain, it's nice and hungry and gets to work quickly and efficiently.

well, here it is. this is during the mash part of brewing. Basically, a waiting period of about an hour. After this part, I really don't have any photos because 1. I was busy brewing and 2. I was busy drinking.

here's the whole scene, complete with my patio heater. Came in handy, it was pretty damn cold out there. The whole things took way longer than we expected. But, that's what all grain-brewers tell newbies like me. We didn't have any huge disasters, but it certainly didn't go perfect. Nevertheless, I about to rack the beer into a secondary fermenter tonight, and will be drinking the beer in a few weeks. Oh, and one more thing. This particular beer is a clone of Fat Tire Ale, and you welcome to come try one at my house in February! Cheers!

Hard Cider

Posted in Brewing with tags on October 7, 2011 by Verge

Monika went apple picking with Cynthia last weekend. I would have loved to have gone, but I was stuck at work at the Mart. We had more that a couple could handle, so....

...we juiced that bumper crop of apples with a genius plan. This is our new juicer, the Breville made famous by that movie Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead (check it out)

yeah, so that thing works WAY better than our old juicer, which actually worked pretty fine all on it's own anyway. Now I had some of this fresh juice, and it was delicious. Fresh apples, hours off the vine, taste just like October should, but we had other long term plans...

instead, we simmered the juice to make a batch of hard cider. Damn straight. That's what Autumn is all about. It's natural. Fruit falls, ferments, and makes me happy.

cooled the cider, pitched the yeast. It's been bubbling like crazy ever since. Should be ready in a few weeks. You should stop by one Sunday afternoon when we cook it up in a crock pot with some pumpkin spice and cinnamon sticks!

and, for a bonus, check out these pictures over at Cynthia’s Facebook page.