Hazelwood’s Brewday Part 2

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I didn’t brew yesterday, we had another day at the pub. I did brew today - yay! I brewed a batch of my best bitter for cask. We’re out for lunch tomorrow so my next brew will probably be Wednesday, another NEIPA.

IMG_7644.jpeg
 
Despite what I said 2 posts ago, my final beer in this tranche is going to be another batch of my Full English…

Today we went out for a pub lunch with friends and I was drinking cask ale. My own bitter is very nice and even won a gold award from CAMRA but it isn’t a cask ale and I’d like to see if I can get a bit closer to a cask ale without buying a load more gear so I have a cunning plan.

I’m going to brew the beer just the same as usual but instead of kegging the beer and force carbonating it I’m going to put it in one of the King Keg pressure barrels I’ve been trying to give away for the last two years along with 40g of priming sugar and let it carbonate and condition for a couple of weeks. Then I’m going to put it on a high shelf and connect the tap from the pressure barrel via a length of tubing to one of my keg taps (which will be lower than the base of the pressure barrel). The beer will be dispensed via gravity and a little pressure from CO2 in the pressure barrel which I will replace as the beer is poured by a low pressure CO2 feed.

I’ve no idea if this will work as I hope but I feel that it could 🤷‍♂️. I’ll let you know, I’m brewing the beer tomorrow.

A question if I may @Hazelwood Brewery . Im planning on doing something similar to this with my next attempt at a best bitter.

I’d considered fermenting and transferring to a keg when a few points off FG, allowing to ferment out in keg, eg imitating what commercial breweries do with cask beers.

However, think this might be tricky in practice, so will likely ferment out then transfer to a keg and prime (which I understand you have done).

Did you prime and allow to carb / condition at a ‘serving temperature’ (say 12ish deg) or did you give it a few more days at something closer to fermentation temperature and then move to lower temp?

Cheers!
 
A question if I may @Hazelwood Brewery . Im planning on doing something similar to this with my next attempt at a best bitter.

I’d considered fermenting and transferring to a keg when a few points off FG, allowing to ferment out in keg, eg imitating what commercial breweries do with cask beers.

However, think this might be tricky in practice, so will likely ferment out then transfer to a keg and prime (which I understand you have done).

Did you prime and allow to carb / condition at a ‘serving temperature’ (say 12ish deg) or did you give it a few more days at something closer to fermentation temperature and then move to lower temp?

Cheers!
I did indeed ferment to completion and then primed - 40g sugar (dissolved in a little boiled water) added to 23 litres. This was enough to last until the last 4 or 5 pints and I had then to inject a little CO2.

On this occasion I carbonated, conditioned, and dispensed at ambient temperature which in my garage has been around 18C-20C. Once I’ve made some modifications to my brewshed though I will store/dispense at cellar temperatures - unless I decide ambient is better!

I have been very pleased with the results so I’d definitely encourage you to give it a go if you enjoy cask beers.
 
I did indeed ferment to completion and then primed - 40g sugar (dissolved in a little boiled water) added to 23 litres. This was enough to last until the last 4 or 5 pints and I had then to inject a little CO2.

On this occasion I carbonated, conditioned, and dispensed at ambient temperature which in my garage has been around 18C-20C. Once I’ve made some modifications to my brewshed though I will store/dispense at cellar temperatures - unless I decide ambient is better!

I have been very pleased with the results so I’d definitely encourage you to give it a go if you enjoy cask beers.

Great, thanks. Definitely going to give this a go. I love cask beers and have been wondering for a while how best to get close at home with what equipment I have available..

Think I’ll go as you have, but after a week or so in the keg at ambient with priming sugar, hold and serve at cellar temp 👍👍

Cheers!
 
That NEIPA (V2) is in the fermentation cabinet. Fingers crossed it turns out more hazy and the haze is longer lasting. The main differences are the addition of some raw oats a a bigger dry hop addition.

View attachment 103775
Do you do anything special to try to reduce oxygen pickup when dumping the dry hops in or transferring to the keg?
 
I have an empty slot in my fermentation cabinet so I’m going to get another brew on tomorrow. I’ve decided I’m going to brew a brown ale to fill the gap between my bitter and my porter.

I’m thinking the grist will comprise biscuit, honey, crystal, brown, and chocolate speciality malts in addition to my base malt of Maris Otter. I’ll use Centennial for bittering and First Gold for flavouring and aroma, and I’ll use Liberty Bell as my favoured yeast for estery English ales.

Edit: Tomorrows brewday is confirmed. Water is in the boiler, timer set for an early start, grist prepared.
IMG_7675.jpeg
 
Last edited:
Today I’ve kegged the Belgian Dubbel. The beer turned out at 7.0% and it looks, smells, and tastes good out of the fermenter. I’m already impatient for this to condition quickly! 😂

IMG_7730.jpeg


Having kegged the Dubbel I have a spare slot in the fermentation cabinet so I’m now brewing a batch of my “Butterfly Effect” American Pale to fill that empty slot.
 
The best bitter is ready today and is looking good. It finished exactly on point at 1.014 to give me the usual 4.5% ABV and the colour/clarity is perfect for kegging, I should have only a little sediment from this (and secondary fermentation).
IMG_7804.jpeg


This beer is going in a King Keg to become as close as I can get to a cask beer and I’m hoping it will be as good as the last one. This is the setup, fermenter on the worktop, King Keg on a small table because the syphon tube isn’t long enough if I put the keg on the floor. On the table the tube reaches nicely to the bottom of the keg to minimise splashing.
IMG_7806.jpeg

IMG_7807.jpeg


At the end of the transfer I have a nice clean compact yeast cake from the Liberty Bell yeast.
IMG_7808.jpeg


And the job is done. 24 litres in the King Keg which is about to go in the garage. It will need 2 weeks to carbonate and up to another 2 weeks to condition but I’m already resigned to starting it before then (It’s soooo good! 😋).
IMG_7809.jpeg


Now I have an empty slot in the fermentation cabinet I need to decide what to brew next 🤔
 
I decided last night I’d brew a stout today. I milled the lighter grains and roast grains separately because I mash the lighter grains and steep the roast grains.
IMG_7823.jpeg


This was me steeping the darker grist last night and separating out the liquor from the spent grist this morning.
IMG_7830.jpeg

IMG_7838.jpeg


Here you see the colour of the wort from the mash, and the colour of the steeped liquor which I heated on the hob before adding it to the wort at the end of the boil.
IMG_7837.jpeg

IMG_7841.jpeg


Here’s the wort being transferred to the fermenter and I now have 21 litres of stout in the fermentation cabinet.
IMG_7842.jpeg

IMG_7843.jpeg


Tomorrow I’ll brew another batch of bitter for the corny keg and I’ll keg the latest NEIPA.
 
I've only just finished my coffee! 😆
I started at 6:00 and now about to add my 10 minute hop additions. Once it’s finished and chilled down I can then keg the NEIPA that’s just finished fermenting while this brew settles, then this brew will go into the bucket used for the NEIPA. No brew tomorrow so at least I don’t also have to prep for that.

#JustInTime 😉
 
Back
Top