I noticed a new "limited edition" Founding Fathers' Pale Ale kit when placing a recent order with Hopshop. The description says "Crisp and refreshing with fruity hops flavours, orchard and tropical fruit aroma and an overlaying biscuit base" which sounds like my kind of thing. Hopshop reassured me that the fruit aroma part is poetic license, just the hopping rather than fruit extract or similar. Let's give it a go then:
Here's the box, which is the usual Festival packaging.
Interestingly the side of the box has the kit name blacked out, and a label stuck on with a slightly different kit name - "English Hart Pale Ale" :
Maybe Ritchies changed the kit name at the last minute or maybe it was sold under the "Hart Pale Ale" name previously, although I don't see any record of that on the Internet.
The kit contents are similar to most of the Festival kits - two malt pouches (3kg total), some dextrose/glucose (350g) to raise the gravity, 10g of yeast, a foil sachet of hop pellets (60g), a filter bag for use when siphoning, and some priming sugar (100g).
A few comments about the contents:
I started the kit today following the Festival instructions, which in brief are:
I will post a follow up in a few days when the main fermentation is done.
Here's the box, which is the usual Festival packaging.
Interestingly the side of the box has the kit name blacked out, and a label stuck on with a slightly different kit name - "English Hart Pale Ale" :
Maybe Ritchies changed the kit name at the last minute or maybe it was sold under the "Hart Pale Ale" name previously, although I don't see any record of that on the Internet.
The kit contents are similar to most of the Festival kits - two malt pouches (3kg total), some dextrose/glucose (350g) to raise the gravity, 10g of yeast, a foil sachet of hop pellets (60g), a filter bag for use when siphoning, and some priming sugar (100g).
A few comments about the contents:
- Always preferable when a kit is all malt, rather than needing to be beefed up with dextrose. Wouldn't it have been nice to find two 1.7kg pouches and no glucose, but I suppose the pouches are made by the million to a single size.
- Malt pouches rather than tins seem to be the norm now, but I don't really understand why. With a tin it's much easier to see if there's any malt left in the tin and to wash it out with a bit of hot water, whereas with a pouch it always feels like there's a bit more that could be squeezed out. Also tins are recyclable, whereas pouches are plastic lined and destined for landfill.
- The malt pouches say "English Pale Ale", the yeast is "British Ale Yeast", and the hop pellets are "English Pale Ale". This seems to be quite common, to have component parts which sound rather generic, and likely to be included in any number of the company's kits.
- I assume the fruity aromas are largely down to the hop pellets, but I don't see any mention of the hop varieties used in this kit. Again the hop pellets being labelled "English Pale Ale" suggests they might be common to various kits. Surely not.
- I very much like the hop filter bags included with the Festival kits, which make a big difference in terms of removing the majority of the hop mush when siphoning. I always give them a good wash after use, then use them again with other non-Festival kits.
I started the kit today following the Festival instructions, which in brief are:
- Sterilise everything.
- Soak the malt pouches in hot water for a while then squeeze them out into the FV (as best you can give they're pouches rather than tins, mumble mumble, mutter, mutter).
- Add 3L of boiled water to the malt and stir vigorously to dissolve the malt.
- Add the 350g of dextrose and stir vigorously again.
- Top up to 23L with cold water.
- Check temperate is below 25C.
- Measure the original gravity.
- Tip in the yeast and stir it in a bit.
- Stick the lid and airlock onto the FV.
I will post a follow up in a few days when the main fermentation is done.