peebee
Out of Control
On the back of my (seemingly popular?) "low-alcohol" thread I thought I could apply some of what I learnt to session beers. Beers with an OG of about 1.035-1.042. I wouldn't like to try these techniques on anything stronger. The idea is to get a fast-turnover form of brewing when attention is focused on something else. Or "Crisis Beer" if you like?
I was develop these ideas on another forum site, but I think folk here might care to see it (bigger audience on this site, but some here will have seen it)? There are a few issues which might cause some problems, but I'm sure a bit of creativeness will cover them over. I'll deal with those issues first.
The "issues" all relate to fermenting in the dispensing keg. So ...
ONE: You need a pressure keg, this method is not for bottling. Although if you have a means of counter pressure bottle filling the beer could be finished in a pressure vessel and then transferred to bottles or small kegs. I'm counting on this should the "third issue" start to arise.
TWO: All my Corny kegs are fitted with floating beer extractors. If your Corny keg uses the original "liquid out" dip-tube (the case for the vast majority of brewers) you may have problems with murky beer unless you can come up with something imaginative to deal with the extra yeast in the keg. I'm offering no tried solution apart from using floating beer extractors. You might sacrifice a few pints to clear the yeast out (as people already do, but dealing with less yeast and sacrificing less beer) - such action will mitigate "issue 3" too.
THREE: Leaving the beer in contact with a lot of yeast can develop off flavours. But this is fast drinking, low alcohol, session beer (<4.5% ABV) so I'm counting on there being no problem within a month, perhaps two? I'm still drinking unaffected low-alcohol beer fermented in the keg 8 months ago. But low-alcohol beer will not create as much yeast.
Still with me? That out of the way let me start with a recipe and get the equipment together.
PREPARATION
EQUIPMENT
30L+ Boiler with bag for BIAB, else Grainfather or similar one-pot system. Plus a stirring spoon and perhaps a hop spider.
19L Corny keg with floating beer extractor, or similar.
Spunding valve on a Corny keg gas-in disconnect or suitable secondary regulator.
CO2 gas cylinder and primary regulator.
There is nothing simpler than the "Brew-in-a-bag" technique. But I'm using a Grainfather to "emulate" BIAB. Any one-pot system should do? BIAB is supposed to be a no-sparge technique, but if boiler size forces some sparging to make up the volume, so be it. The Grainfather has a 30L capacity and will handle an 18L batch "no-sparge" with ease. Grainfather seems to discourage "no-sparge" even to the point of having an article suggesting no-sparge produces inferior beer ... utter cobblers. Some very minor alterations makes no-sparge in a Grainfather easier and involves having two small jubilee clips. If using BIAB you can make some modifications to gain one of the advantages of using one-pot systems (i.e. recircuation) ... see here
I use a "hop spider" when boiling the hops 'cos I'm using pellets which disintegrate into mush.
A 19L Corny keg or similar pressure vessel. What, no fermenter? Nope, we're skipping that step completely! Along with all the time consuming transfers, priming or carbonation, spoilage risk, etc.
A spunding valve. I don't like spunding valves 'cos they're so crabby. I use small regulators (Shako NR200, but others may work). Regulators have the disadvantage of requiring "back-pressure" on the input port (connected to gas supply, via the primary regulator, NOT directly!) even though it doesn't use the gas, but you can turn this to an advantage. You can also get "Blowtie" devices for spunding valves, but I've yet to try one.
And a gas cylinder to serve the finished beer (and for "back-pressure" as above). Not forgetting a tap for serving.
RECIPE
This was an example recipe ("Centennial Blonde"). The recipe mashes at 66C for 1 hour:
65% Lager Malt (3EBC)
15% Dextrin Malt (2-3EBC)
10% Cara Malt (30EBC)
10% Vienna Malt (9EBC)
Looking for a SG of about 1.040.
But you can use 97% Pale Malt and 3% 100-150EBC Crystal Malt and anything in between and I doubt they'll be much difference.
It is then boiled for an hour with four about equal hop additions at 0, 25, 40 and 55 minutes; the first two Centennial hops and the remainder (late) hops as Cascade. I used the "BBC pellets" because they have superior keeping qualities and the American "C" hops are otherwise pretty dismal if not fresh. Again you can use other hops, possibly an ideal time to try different hops? Looking for 20-22IBUs.
1/2 Protofloc tablet to be added near end.
I used "Beersmith" as the recipe builder, but use whatever you are comfortable with. Beersmith includes a BIAB (full-boil-volume-mash) mode which simplifies the volume calculations. You may need to tune the "grain absorbance" and "boil off" volumes to customise the water calculations; I'll need to do a bit more tuning of these before another attempt (you can of course just roughly "wing it", but I like the comfort these calculators bring when tuned right).
WATER
I chose a fairly inane "yellow, dry" profile out of "Bru'n Water" because this is a new-world recipe with little emphasis on malt and more emphasis on the perfumed hops. In this exercise I was pitching "Bru'n Water" against "Mash-Made-Easy"; the salt calculations were the same using Gypsum, Calcium Chloride solution (7.4%) and Epsom Salt but the pH predictions were quite different (using same quantities of Phosphoric Acid).
Note Calcium Chloride is a pain to use dry, because it is so hygroscopic. Making a solution of 8-10% and knowing its OG is much easier (warning: it can get very hot when dissolving). Bru'n Water appears to stick to grams when configured to use a solution: Ignore it, it is measuring in millilitres really (March 2020, may change in future?).
Next "Brewday!".
I was develop these ideas on another forum site, but I think folk here might care to see it (bigger audience on this site, but some here will have seen it)? There are a few issues which might cause some problems, but I'm sure a bit of creativeness will cover them over. I'll deal with those issues first.
The "issues" all relate to fermenting in the dispensing keg. So ...
ONE: You need a pressure keg, this method is not for bottling. Although if you have a means of counter pressure bottle filling the beer could be finished in a pressure vessel and then transferred to bottles or small kegs. I'm counting on this should the "third issue" start to arise.
TWO: All my Corny kegs are fitted with floating beer extractors. If your Corny keg uses the original "liquid out" dip-tube (the case for the vast majority of brewers) you may have problems with murky beer unless you can come up with something imaginative to deal with the extra yeast in the keg. I'm offering no tried solution apart from using floating beer extractors. You might sacrifice a few pints to clear the yeast out (as people already do, but dealing with less yeast and sacrificing less beer) - such action will mitigate "issue 3" too.
THREE: Leaving the beer in contact with a lot of yeast can develop off flavours. But this is fast drinking, low alcohol, session beer (<4.5% ABV) so I'm counting on there being no problem within a month, perhaps two? I'm still drinking unaffected low-alcohol beer fermented in the keg 8 months ago. But low-alcohol beer will not create as much yeast.
Still with me? That out of the way let me start with a recipe and get the equipment together.
PREPARATION
EQUIPMENT
30L+ Boiler with bag for BIAB, else Grainfather or similar one-pot system. Plus a stirring spoon and perhaps a hop spider.
19L Corny keg with floating beer extractor, or similar.
Spunding valve on a Corny keg gas-in disconnect or suitable secondary regulator.
CO2 gas cylinder and primary regulator.
There is nothing simpler than the "Brew-in-a-bag" technique. But I'm using a Grainfather to "emulate" BIAB. Any one-pot system should do? BIAB is supposed to be a no-sparge technique, but if boiler size forces some sparging to make up the volume, so be it. The Grainfather has a 30L capacity and will handle an 18L batch "no-sparge" with ease. Grainfather seems to discourage "no-sparge" even to the point of having an article suggesting no-sparge produces inferior beer ... utter cobblers. Some very minor alterations makes no-sparge in a Grainfather easier and involves having two small jubilee clips. If using BIAB you can make some modifications to gain one of the advantages of using one-pot systems (i.e. recircuation) ... see here
I use a "hop spider" when boiling the hops 'cos I'm using pellets which disintegrate into mush.
A 19L Corny keg or similar pressure vessel. What, no fermenter? Nope, we're skipping that step completely! Along with all the time consuming transfers, priming or carbonation, spoilage risk, etc.
A spunding valve. I don't like spunding valves 'cos they're so crabby. I use small regulators (Shako NR200, but others may work). Regulators have the disadvantage of requiring "back-pressure" on the input port (connected to gas supply, via the primary regulator, NOT directly!) even though it doesn't use the gas, but you can turn this to an advantage. You can also get "Blowtie" devices for spunding valves, but I've yet to try one.
And a gas cylinder to serve the finished beer (and for "back-pressure" as above). Not forgetting a tap for serving.
RECIPE
This was an example recipe ("Centennial Blonde"). The recipe mashes at 66C for 1 hour:
65% Lager Malt (3EBC)
15% Dextrin Malt (2-3EBC)
10% Cara Malt (30EBC)
10% Vienna Malt (9EBC)
Looking for a SG of about 1.040.
But you can use 97% Pale Malt and 3% 100-150EBC Crystal Malt and anything in between and I doubt they'll be much difference.
It is then boiled for an hour with four about equal hop additions at 0, 25, 40 and 55 minutes; the first two Centennial hops and the remainder (late) hops as Cascade. I used the "BBC pellets" because they have superior keeping qualities and the American "C" hops are otherwise pretty dismal if not fresh. Again you can use other hops, possibly an ideal time to try different hops? Looking for 20-22IBUs.
1/2 Protofloc tablet to be added near end.
I used "Beersmith" as the recipe builder, but use whatever you are comfortable with. Beersmith includes a BIAB (full-boil-volume-mash) mode which simplifies the volume calculations. You may need to tune the "grain absorbance" and "boil off" volumes to customise the water calculations; I'll need to do a bit more tuning of these before another attempt (you can of course just roughly "wing it", but I like the comfort these calculators bring when tuned right).
WATER
I chose a fairly inane "yellow, dry" profile out of "Bru'n Water" because this is a new-world recipe with little emphasis on malt and more emphasis on the perfumed hops. In this exercise I was pitching "Bru'n Water" against "Mash-Made-Easy"; the salt calculations were the same using Gypsum, Calcium Chloride solution (7.4%) and Epsom Salt but the pH predictions were quite different (using same quantities of Phosphoric Acid).
Note Calcium Chloride is a pain to use dry, because it is so hygroscopic. Making a solution of 8-10% and knowing its OG is much easier (warning: it can get very hot when dissolving). Bru'n Water appears to stick to grams when configured to use a solution: Ignore it, it is measuring in millilitres really (March 2020, may change in future?).
Next "Brewday!".