Hi Lads,
Greetings from the Emerald Island!
Let me introduce myself.
I'm a mexican lad who's been living in Northern Ireland for the best of the last 8 years. I've wanted to make my own beer for years and just 2 months ago I took the plunge. I got a coopers starter kit with the included standard lager kit. I made every mistake possible but the beer turned out ok. I was initially unhappy with it until I had a bottled coopers lager which tasted extremely close to what I did. Everything worked fine in the end but that kit was just not my cup of tea.
I'm now drinking a John Bull porter and have a coopers heritage IPA in the fermenter (which from today's gravity test is tasting great.)
I have a question which is multipart so I'll break down the issues:
Being a native of the Sonora desert I grew up with the sweet elixir that is Bacanora (I'm a new member to the forum so please wikipedia it) living in ireland and drinking great whskeys I was blown away by strongly peated irish and scottish whiskeys that have that smokey flavour that I relate to the cactussy taste of Bacanora. Since I've had my first porter here I've been obsesed with the idea of a strong porter with a similar dark smokey (but-not-woody) flavour. The connection was immediately made: Chipotle chillies!!!!!!
I've read around the forums and am happy to read that it is not a new idea but rather common! Great news!
I want to do this properly so I have some doubts:
On my current kit porter I did an experiment to get a nice chipotle taste to it. I don't know if I did it right but the results are great:
I didn't want to ruin a full batch so I did a small experiment. I put just one chilly on a small jar to cure in whiskey for 2 days before bottling to kill any nasties (not sure if this really helps to avoid contamination). The whiskey (blackbush from bushmills) was a delight to drink afterwards. I cut the chilly in 10 parts and put the slices straight into 10 bottles. The result is a great beer with a nice spicy after taste that I am loving so now I want to make a full batch of it and make it better.
The whiskey tasted great, it had a VERY spicy after-drink effect but a very nice smokey chipotle taste during drinking. The beer is great and has a nice and mild after-taste spicyness but I feel that I've lost a lot of the smokey effect. My questions are as follow:
Do I need to do the whiskey-curing step or should I just drop the chillies in the fermenter? (I don't have a spare vessel so can't do secondary)
should this be done after fermentation is finished and if so for how long?
I wouldn't mind dropping the chillies with the whiskey (about 125ml) to a 23ltr vessel but would be worried if the alcohol content messes up with the yeast and prevents proper carbonation.
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
As stated before I'm just a newbie and reckon I will be trying kits for a while before I know enough to take the plunge to AG which is my ultimate goal.
Cheers
Greetings from the Emerald Island!
Let me introduce myself.
I'm a mexican lad who's been living in Northern Ireland for the best of the last 8 years. I've wanted to make my own beer for years and just 2 months ago I took the plunge. I got a coopers starter kit with the included standard lager kit. I made every mistake possible but the beer turned out ok. I was initially unhappy with it until I had a bottled coopers lager which tasted extremely close to what I did. Everything worked fine in the end but that kit was just not my cup of tea.
I'm now drinking a John Bull porter and have a coopers heritage IPA in the fermenter (which from today's gravity test is tasting great.)
I have a question which is multipart so I'll break down the issues:
Being a native of the Sonora desert I grew up with the sweet elixir that is Bacanora (I'm a new member to the forum so please wikipedia it) living in ireland and drinking great whskeys I was blown away by strongly peated irish and scottish whiskeys that have that smokey flavour that I relate to the cactussy taste of Bacanora. Since I've had my first porter here I've been obsesed with the idea of a strong porter with a similar dark smokey (but-not-woody) flavour. The connection was immediately made: Chipotle chillies!!!!!!
I've read around the forums and am happy to read that it is not a new idea but rather common! Great news!
I want to do this properly so I have some doubts:
On my current kit porter I did an experiment to get a nice chipotle taste to it. I don't know if I did it right but the results are great:
I didn't want to ruin a full batch so I did a small experiment. I put just one chilly on a small jar to cure in whiskey for 2 days before bottling to kill any nasties (not sure if this really helps to avoid contamination). The whiskey (blackbush from bushmills) was a delight to drink afterwards. I cut the chilly in 10 parts and put the slices straight into 10 bottles. The result is a great beer with a nice spicy after taste that I am loving so now I want to make a full batch of it and make it better.
The whiskey tasted great, it had a VERY spicy after-drink effect but a very nice smokey chipotle taste during drinking. The beer is great and has a nice and mild after-taste spicyness but I feel that I've lost a lot of the smokey effect. My questions are as follow:
Do I need to do the whiskey-curing step or should I just drop the chillies in the fermenter? (I don't have a spare vessel so can't do secondary)
should this be done after fermentation is finished and if so for how long?
I wouldn't mind dropping the chillies with the whiskey (about 125ml) to a 23ltr vessel but would be worried if the alcohol content messes up with the yeast and prevents proper carbonation.
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
As stated before I'm just a newbie and reckon I will be trying kits for a while before I know enough to take the plunge to AG which is my ultimate goal.
Cheers