peebee
Out of Control
My original thread (https://www.thehomebrewforum.co.uk/threads/peebees-brewday-low-alcohol-beer) has got a bit large and unwieldy, so I'm kicking off a new thread (Part II) for this latest sortie into "low-alcohol beers" (less than 1% ABV, although I was guilty of creeping up to 1.4% in my previous thread).This is brewed low-alcohol beer thread and a "boil my finished beer" free zone!
So, a quick summary of where I was at (crikey, it's a year or more since I last brewed one, but I've finally got bored of fruit juice "spritzers" and ginger cordial on my alcohol abstention days): The beers are mashed at higher than "normal" temperatures (around 74°C) and fermented with yeast that ain't keen on dextrin (such as malto-triose): S-33 being my preferred yeast although I'm told "Windsor" yeast is very similar. I've played with cold extraction methods and ferment (and dry hop) directly in the dispensing keg to avoid un-necessary handling of the vulnerable green beer. I say "vulnerable" because such beers are not as hostile to spoilage organisms as normal beers, and the light flavours will not mask even the tiniest hint of "infection".
Firstly I need to get my kit together. I use a "Grainfather" brewing system, but any system will do including the lowly "BIAB" method. I say "lowly" but use my GF to emulate a BIAB session with full-boil-volume-mashes as a no-sparge technique (for a mash of only 2-3kg of grain, what is the point of sparging). Over the past year I've been shown I'm still using the GF in an overly-complicated way, so first change is get rid of the "top-plate" on the malt-pipe, and get rid of the over-flow pipe too. Neither items serve a useful purpose, although I was to learn the hard way that precautions are necessary when no over-flow pipe. The incredibly annoying "seal" on the perforated bottom plate is wired on with annealed stainless steel wire (got it on eBay).
The hole for the over-flow pipe is plugged with 1/2" BSP plastic plug (use stainless steel if you want).
I'll follow up this post with a recipe shortly...
So, a quick summary of where I was at (crikey, it's a year or more since I last brewed one, but I've finally got bored of fruit juice "spritzers" and ginger cordial on my alcohol abstention days): The beers are mashed at higher than "normal" temperatures (around 74°C) and fermented with yeast that ain't keen on dextrin (such as malto-triose): S-33 being my preferred yeast although I'm told "Windsor" yeast is very similar. I've played with cold extraction methods and ferment (and dry hop) directly in the dispensing keg to avoid un-necessary handling of the vulnerable green beer. I say "vulnerable" because such beers are not as hostile to spoilage organisms as normal beers, and the light flavours will not mask even the tiniest hint of "infection".
Firstly I need to get my kit together. I use a "Grainfather" brewing system, but any system will do including the lowly "BIAB" method. I say "lowly" but use my GF to emulate a BIAB session with full-boil-volume-mashes as a no-sparge technique (for a mash of only 2-3kg of grain, what is the point of sparging). Over the past year I've been shown I'm still using the GF in an overly-complicated way, so first change is get rid of the "top-plate" on the malt-pipe, and get rid of the over-flow pipe too. Neither items serve a useful purpose, although I was to learn the hard way that precautions are necessary when no over-flow pipe. The incredibly annoying "seal" on the perforated bottom plate is wired on with annealed stainless steel wire (got it on eBay).
The hole for the over-flow pipe is plugged with 1/2" BSP plastic plug (use stainless steel if you want).
I'll follow up this post with a recipe shortly...