Mrhandsome
Landlord.
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2019
- Messages
- 971
- Reaction score
- 1,886
Damn that £40 minimum free delivery, I had to advise her to fill the basket with beers!u lucky so and so :hat: waitrose don't delivery to my area
Damn that £40 minimum free delivery, I had to advise her to fill the basket with beers!u lucky so and so :hat: waitrose don't delivery to my area
Hi I am glad you enjoyed it. It was an experimental beer. This is the recipeMy next is @samale Black Rye IPA. Using t58 yeast we discussed this after I was talking about brewing my belgian stout with t58, so i've really been looking forward to this, it sounds right up my street although i've never knowingly drunk a beer with Rye in it before.
Anyway... poured nicely, big thick creamy head, well carbonated.
Aroma, mainly cascade i think, piney, resinous perhaps almost herby!
Appearance, Black, perhaps not jet black, but black.
Flavour, A malty almost peppery taste gives way to a hoppy bitterness, again piney/herby. Perhaps not as dry as the BJCP notes suggest, I definitely get some sweetness. I have no idea what the ABV is in this one... I guess at 5 ish, it doesn't seem particularly strong but i could be wrong!
Mouthfeel, medium bodied.
My first Rye beer, and I like it. It's a very nice IPA, very hoppy but not overly so and I love the dark malts/rye flavours. It gets better as it warms, I had it chilled, I could easily sink a few of these but definitely want to know what the ABV is!
View attachment 33424
Is the recipe for this on your brew thread. I will be bottling my dark winter Saison this weekend hopefully. The aroma already has a nice mix of dark stone fruit and Brett of it.
I wasn't to sure about it at the start, I found it slightly sweet like Caramel. The more I had it the more I enjoyed it. The abv was 6.5%. The recipe is below, the last centennial dry hop I only had 30g left.Next one....
@samale Red X IPA,
Lovely thick head which lasts more than half the glass. I think perhaps could do with being just a touch better carbonated.
Aroma, mainly orangey from the amarilo I guess, but you definitely get melon as well, lovely.
Appearance, red as the name suggests.
Flavour, A very smooth IPA hoppy bitterness. quite orangey, mellowed by the red malt. Again I would say the alcohol content is well hidden, i'd say again anywhere between 5-7%, but it isn't in your face. I would say that the malt and hops compliment each other well in this one.
Mouthfeel, Medium bodied.
This is my favourite of the two you've sent me , I would buy this again and again if I was in the pub, i've really enjoyed it. It's not the high hop bitterness of some IPA's and i'm sure that some would find it less hoppy than they would like but to be honest i've loved it.
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yeah I brewed it a while back its here. pennine's brewdaysIs the recipe for this on your brew thread. I will be bottling my dark winter Saison this weekend hopefully. The aroma already has a nice mix of dark stone fruit and Brett of it.
Cheers Dave, I appreciate brett can be an acquired taste so thanks for the kind words:hat:Just had a Bret pale from @strange-steve . Great beer. Fruity Brett aroma. I have only had a few Bret beers but the flavour reminded me of the Brewdog Bret IPA intially but stronger as it warmed up.fruity with a slight tartnessView attachment 33427. Enjoyable beer
My current batch is an attempt at a similar beer(I think). Which yeast did you use for the initial fermentation out of interest? Was the Brett a fresh lab pitch? How long had that been since pitching the Brett?Cheers Dave, I appreciate brett can be an acquired taste so thanks for the kind words:hat:
I used the Westmalle yeast WLP530 in the primary then added a vial of WLP650 to the secondary. It was then left for 10 weeks before bottling and has been in the bottle now for 5 months.Which yeast did you use for the initial fermentation out of interest? Was the Brett a fresh lab pitch? How long had that been since pitching the Brett?
With the Bastogne yeast yours will be more "authentically" Orval-like, especially if using the dregs. That being said, the primary yeast character is very much muted when the brett does its thing.I have used whitelabs Bastogne for mine and plan to go down the Orval dregs route for half the batch and then no Brett for the other.
Yeah it's a very different beast when drank young, and to be honest a very young Orval is frankly a bit dull in my opinion.every time I have had Orval it's been with 2-3 months from bottling so I wouldn't have thought I have had it when the Brett character is at its strongest.
Ah! A beer plant....how much for a cutting Foxy?My latest ESB estimated IBU 68.
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Hmmm interesting, did you see a big drop in gravity from the Brett in that 10 week period.I used the Westmalle yeast WLP530 in the primary then added a vial of WLP650 to the secondary. It was then left for 10 weeks before bottling and has been in the bottle now for 5 months.
With the Bastogne yeast yours will be more "authentically" Orval-like, especially if using the dregs. That being said, the primary yeast character is very much muted when the brett does its thing.
Yeah it's a very different beast when drank young, and to be honest a very young Orval is frankly a bit dull in my opinion.
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