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HOMEBREW Digest #2523

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HOMEBREW Digest
 · 14 Apr 2024

HOMEBREW Digest #2523		             Mon 06 October 1997 


FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
Digest Janitor: janitor@hbd.org
Many thanks to the Observer & Eccentric Newspapers of
Livonia, Michigan for sponsoring the Homebrew Digest.
URL: http://www.oeonline.com


Contents:
Choreboy lesson, Roasting Barley ("David R. Burley")
Water to make Vienna (John Palmer)
Barley Wine yeast experience (Dave Riedel)
RE: Vienna water (dajohnson)
re:barleywine yeast (Charles Burns)
homebrew book (michael rose)
The Jethro GABF Report ("Rob Moline")
Brewpubs in minneapolis (todd.s.taylor)
malt modification (korz)
re-directed submission, Style Variations (i.brew2)
Wyeast strains (smurman)
bulk priming/data point on insulation. (Harlan Bauer)
All Grain Questions ("John Penn")
Tradition in Brewing ("Kostelac, John")
Science "Talk" in Brewing ("Jim Pierce")
brewing to style ("Bryan L. Gros")
Vienna Water Pt-I (A. J. deLange)
Vienna Water Part II (A. J. deLange)
Vienna Water Part III (A. J. deLange)
Vienna Water - Part IV (A. J. deLange)
alan Moen's column (AlannnnT)
Re: Toasting Grains ("Fred L. Johnson")


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----------------------------------------------------------------------


Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 11:22:07 -0400
From: "David R. Burley" <Dave_Burley@compuserve.com>
Subject: Choreboy lesson, Roasting Barley

Brewsters:

John Schnupp has experienced problems with plugging the last three batche=
s
using the copper tube with holes in it to drain his vessel. And is
strongly tempted to go back to is choreboy setup which had worked fine. I=

zapped his address too soon so here is my reply to him. John send me an
e-mail so we can sked - KC2LZ.

As you may know I am an advocate of the Choreboy for draining the boiler =
in
the presence of hops after having spent a lot of unproductive engineering=

time on other methods.

My theory is that the Choreboy offers such a large surface area that the
flow velocity at any one point on the imaginary sphere of the choreboy
filter is low enough that hop pieces cannot impede the flow of liquid.
There are so many pathways it doesn't make any difference. Having severa=
l
layers in the Choreboy to get through (imagine concentric spheres) and ev=
en
though they are large holes this multiple layer prevents the hops bits fr=
om
reaching the outlet tube.

With the holes or even slots (better than holes) the flow velocity at the=

surface of the hole is high enough to allow the hop leaf ( or grain
particle in the case of RIMS) to be sucked into the hole and plug it. =

Another disadvantage of the small hole is that the trub can be sucked in
due to the high velocity.

It never ceases to amaze me that the Choreboy method produces clear wort
free of hot break and I can get virtually dry hops remains with perhaps 5=
0
mls of free liquid wort in the bottom of the kettle by tipping it up. It
works! Another factor in this may be the fact that I use a counter curren=
t
cooler and the 50 feet of 3/8 tubing provides sufficient resistance that =
it
takes perhaps 10 -15 minutes to empty the kettle. The combo of the Choreb=
oy
and the slow flow are a perfect set-up for this use.

You hit the RIMS question right on the head. A stuck flow kills the RIMS=

and the lesson I take from the Choreboy is to have plenty of surface area=

and a slow enough flow at the surface that you don't plug the screens. Yo=
u
might consider two screens one on top of the other, with perhaps some kin=
d
of very loose filter cloth between, or just line the top of the false
bottom with another loose medium of some sort (maybe a single layer or ma=
ny
layers of cheese cloth ( like the hop bed). Just a thought as I don't ha=
ve
a RIMS although the temptation is strong - just a matter of what part of =
my
brewing/winemaking/ham/golf stuff do I get rid of? Or maybe my Explorer?
- -----------------------------
Kevin Kane asks about roasting Barley for Stout production. I roast barl=
ey
and other grains and malts. Last year at Christmas my Toasted Oatmeal
Imperial Stout was greeted with loud acclaim. I used the oatmeal as the
only roast ingredient in the beer and it was terrific.

Here's how I do it.

Roasted Barley for Stout

Process I

Put 2# 4 oz of animal food quality ( feed store) grains - NOT seed Barley=
-
on a large cookie sheet with sides about 3/4 inch high.

Dry the grains for 11/2 hours @375F, raise the temperature to 450F and
roast for 20 minutes until only about 10% of the grains are light brown a=
nd
10% are black and the rest are a nice chocolatey brown.

Process II

A shortened version 45 minutes at 375F and 20 minutes at 450F.

Both methods seem to work fine.

Other methods, that are more work but give a more uniform quality, amount=

to keeping the temperature at 425F the whole time and stirring the barley=

every 15 minutes for 1 hour and 15 minutes. This produces a much more
uniform product and avoids hot spots in which part of the barley blackens=

and the rest stays brown. This is especially necessary with the oatmeal
which only takes 45 minutes to achieve the desired blackedness. =


Be prepared to do this when no else is in the house and you can open a
window and keep an eye on it since it will start to produce clouds of bla=
ck
smoke if left too long. This time is dependent on the dryness of the barl=
ey
- which is why I dry it first, unless I have had the barley in the house
for some time. The smoke point means it is finished - or you are!
- ----------------------------------
Keep on brewin'


Dave Burley
Kinnelon, NJ 07405
103164.3202@compuserve.com
Dave_Burley@compuserve.com =

Voice e-mail OK =


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 09:19:07 -0700
From: John Palmer <jjpalmer@gte.net>
Subject: Water to make Vienna

Dave said he was having trouble achieving the water profile for Vienna
to produce a Vienna style lager.
>From Dave's page:
Vienna: 200 Ca, 118 HCO3, 60 Mg, 125 SO4, 8 Na, 12 Cl (all in ppm)
This profile matches that listed in Noonan, New Lager Brewing, and has
the carbonates listed as HCO3 (soluble bicarbonate), not as CaCO3.... It
makes a difference of course if this is actually a mistake and the
number is supposed to be calcium carbonate, but I am going to assume
that bicarbonate is correct.

Now then, I was writing to say that my local water (LA foothills) is:
70 Ca, 230 HCO3, 16 Mg, 42 SO4, 23 Na, 26 Cl
which is not anywhere near Vienna water, but I have brewed several
outstanding Viennas from it, one of which placed first in two seperate
competitions. What I did was use George's Graf-style Vienna recipe from
his Vienna book. That recipe includes a quarter pound of Black Patent
to balance the greater alkalinity of our water here. I think that if
you look to the balance of the malts versus water profile then you can
approximate the style very closely without agonizing over achieving the
right mineral concentrations. One thing I probably could have done was
to add some gypsum to "dry" the hop character a bit, and probably could
have backed off on the BP then too.
My advice is, get as close as you can with your RO water and salts, then
work your malts to achieve the Vienna style.
Have fun,
John

jjpalmer@realbeer.com
Palmer House Brewery and Smithy
http//:www.realbeer.com/jjpalmer/
(yes, I know the pictures aren't working, I will fix it as soon as I get
my new Mac.)


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 09:48:24 -0700 (PDT)
From: Dave Riedel <RIEDEL@ios.bc.ca>
Subject: Barley Wine yeast experience

Scott Rohlf asks about yeasts and barleywine....

I have a batch of barleywine that I'm about to bottle. Admittedly, it would
be better to report after bottle conditioning, but Scott needs answers now.

For my BW, I pitched a 1056 slurry from a batch of 1.060 IPA. I used the IPA
for two reasons 1) ample quantity of cells and 2) slightly higher gravity to
'prepare' the yeast for the onslaught of 1.099. After pitching, I aerated
as thoroughly as possible. I don't have oxygen, but this batch was only 3
gallons in a 5 gallon carboy, so I was able to pick it up and shake the hell
out of it. I shook it perodically over a period of about 2-3 hours; I had no
trouble getting the wort to turn nearly entirely into foam.

After I saw signs of flocculation, I started to swirl the carboy once a day
to re-suspend the yeast. I got the idea from the old British brewers who would
'walk' the barleywine barrel around the brewery to do the same thing. I
checked the gravity when I transferred the beer to a smaller, 3 gallon,
secondary. To my surprise it was in the low to mid 20's! It seems with a
healthy, big, well-aerated pitch, you can ferment a barleywine fully with 1056.
I had already planned to introduce some fresh yeast to the secondary, so I
did, but I'm not sure it was necessary. I will also add some fresh slurry
before bottling, but that's an upcoming project.

cheers,
Dave Riedel
Victoria, BC, Canada

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 97 12:59:37 -0500
From: dajohnson@mail.biosis.org
Subject: RE: Vienna water


Hey all --

In response to a question about Vienna water -- this is what i have
found (granted, i don't know much about water chemistry, but i DO have
2 things to share):

1) In his _Designing Great Beers_, Ray Daniels' says that Vienna water
profiles vary according to different sources. It's too much to list
the various sources he quotes in his chapter on
Vienna-Marzen-Oktoberfests -- but he does give 3 different water
profiles [if you're really interested in the sources, e-mail me and
i'll send them to you]. Anyway, here are the figures he lists:

Mineral Source1 Source2 Source3

Ca 48ppm 225ppm 200ppm
Mg 20ppm 90ppm 60ppm
Na 10ppm 14ppm 8ppm
CO3 76ppm 270ppm 120ppm
SO4 52ppm 172ppm 125ppm
Cl 13 34ppm 12ppm

Apparently the differing figures vary according to 2 or 3 water
sources too. One is listed as well water, while the other 2 are
listed as hard water sources.

2) I recently sent a question about Burtonizing my water for making an
English-style pale ale to the AHA's TechTalk forum. A guy named Dana
Edgell (sp?) responded saying that he has a water treatment worksheet
available on his homepage (http://quantum-net.com/edge_ale/). Not
knowing much about water chemistry, i can't say how accurate his
calculations/suggestions are, but it still seems pretty helpful.

there you go.

dan johnson



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 97 10:33 PDT
From: cburns@egusd.k12.ca.us (Charles Burns)
Subject: re:barleywine yeast

Scott Rohlf (in hbd#2521) asks for comments regarding yeast for a barleywine.

I just finished my _first_ barleywine. I used a 3 quart starter at high
krausen (got lucky on the timing) of Wyeast 1056 for a 3 gallon batch of
beer. OG: 1.119, FG:1.025. Its delicious. Required no rousing, no additional
yeast in secondary. It does not have the fruity esters I was after (just a
slight floral aroma from the hops). Fermented at 70-75F for 1 week in
primary, now 3 weeks in secondary under an ounce of EK Goldings.

My next barleywine I will use either 1728 (scottish) or 1968 (london
special). I advise against the 1056 simply because the beer you end up with
(while nice) does not really conform to the barleywine style in terms of the
esters produced. However, if you want a cleaner dryer barleywine, then use
the 1056.

For flavor examples, I believe you could try a bottle of Youngs Old Nick to
get an example of what 1728 or 1968 would produce and then compare that to
Bigfoot to get an idea of what 1056 would produce. These are just my guesses
but I've had a few barleywines lately (beer judge training is tough work).

Charley (lamenting the lack of esters) in N.Cal


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 11:02:29 -0700
From: michael rose <mrose@ucr.campus.mci.net>
Subject: homebrew book

I'm a part-timer here so I'll state up front that I don't know all the
proper protocall of the HBD.
Recently, and by accident, I found out that a major contributor to the
HBD had published a book about homebrewing. Yet there has been no
mention of it in this forum. (that I have seen) I'm sure this is due to
the professionalism of the author and him not wanting to profit from
this forum.----- On the opposite hand, if my doctor invents some new
drug that would make me more healthy, I'd sure want him to profit from
me. And my brewing is much more important than my health!
Is it proper to ask for recommemdations or discuss the book?
mike rose

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 97 12:47:06 PDT
From: "Rob Moline" <brewer@ames.net>
Subject: The Jethro GABF Report

The Jethro GABF Report
Well, the votes are in, and the medals have been awarded. I am very
pleased to see that some local breweries, to my old stomping grounds
anyway, have been recognized. 75th Street took a Gold for Brown Porter, and
the Pony Express Brewery took a Silver for American Amber. Well deserved.
The only category not awarded all 3 medals was Scottish Ales, only Silver
and Bronze medals there, which brought boos and such, as is always the
crowd response when a category is awarded in such a manner. OTOH, the
biggest laugh came when "Naughty Monkey Brown Ale" was awarded the Silver
for American Browns!
I was asked by Jim Parker to lead a guided beer tour for members of the
AHA, but as I only had 20 minutes notice, I was unable to prepare
adequately. So, I led the group to beers and brewers that I know and
respect. All worked out well though, for 6 of the 8 or 9 breweries I
selected won medals this year.
You may also be pleased to know that Kinney Baughman's Cottonwood Brewery
won a Bronze for American Browns.
It was a great time for the first day, and very relaxed as it was the
members only session and the crowds were manageable. The circus starts
tonight.
Also great was the 'Cigar Smoker' Party at RockBottom, for industry folk
only. But, Brian Rezac and myself were able to personally appeal to Mark
Silva, and were graciously granted extra tickets for a few homebrewers,
like Mark Tumarkin and friends. The gathering for AHA members at Falling
Rock was sparsely attended last night, though I expect more folks to attend
on Friday and Saturday nights.
At this time I wish to give a huge THANK YOU to Mr. Loub and Mr.
Kimbrough, my former General Manager, and the new Head brewer at my former
brewery. As a result of their public statements and actions, I have been
awarded a full scholarship to the Short Course at Siebel, by Bill Siebel! I
feel like I have just been awarded another Gold Medal, and I didn't even
bring any beer! Yahoo!!!!!!!
Mr. Siebel had previously offered me a 50 percent discount, after I failed
to win this years scholarship, but I was unable to take advantage of that
offer. But, you may be surprised to know, and I'm sure you will appreciate
the fact that an industry leader, like Bill Siebel, does keep his finger on
the pulse of the brewing world and was well aware of my trials and
tribulations. He said that his offer was a result of his distaste for
actions that have occurred, and my continued support of the brewing
business through my writings on the HBD and IBS Forum. He said he knew it
would be good not only for me, but for new assistants I would train in the
future.
So, Thanks Guys! Damn, maybe if they had been just a little more
vitriolic, I might have been offered the Diploma Course!!! ;-)
Anyway, this is it for today, I'm off to have lunch with Louis Bonham, and
then attend the Business of Brewing Session.
Cheers!
Jethro

Rob Moline
Brewer At Large
brewer@ames.net

"The More I Know About Beer, The More I Realize I Need To Know More About
Beer!"


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 13:56:30 -0400 (EDT)
From: todd.s.taylor@lmco.com
Subject: Brewpubs in minneapolis

Next weekend I'm going to minneapolis MN for the weekend and can
anyone tell where the brew pubs are in town. I will be staying at the
downtown athletic club. Within walking distance or in the area?
thanks Todd.

You can e-mail me directly at this address or at home
at tstaylor@accinet.net

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 12:57:35 -0500 (CDT)
From: korz@xnet.com
Subject: malt modification

Dave says he wants proof that modern malts are more modified than
the malts of old.

Well, frankly, I have data sheets from many modern malts (left over
from when I used to own a store) and I could drag them out and
give you numeric proof, but I do not have the time at this minute.
I only have a few minutes and I'll tell you why I say with great
confidence that modern Pilsner and Lager malts are more modified
than they were 50 or 100 years ago:

1. George Fix says they are... and

2. In a talk about Belgian brewing techniques and ingredients
given by Eric Toft (formerly a brewmaster in Belgium, now a brewmaster
somewhere near the German-Austrian border), he said that all the
brewmasters in Germany are complaining that the malt is overmodified.
He said that they all are having to reduce their triple-decoction
mashes to double-decoction or even single-decoction mashes because
the beer was coming out too thin in body.

I agree 100% with Charley's post from a few days ago. I'll tell
you what I do: I try brewing with a new malt using a single-step
infusion. If the resulting beer has a lot of hot and cold break,
I add a 135-140F protein rest the next time I use it. My understanding
is (and perhaps George and those like Darryl that have visited
Pilsner Urquell's brewery can verify) that truly undermodified
malt will give you a fraction of the expected yield (like 15 or 20
pts/lb/gal in stead of your usual 25 or 30). DON'T QUOTE ME
ON THIS WITHOUT VALIDATION! THIS IS A VERY FAINT MEMORY AND THE
DATA COULD VERY WELL HAVE BEEN CORRUPTED DURING STORAGE!


Al.

Al Korzonas, Palos Hills, IL
korz@xnet.com

My new website (still under construction, but up-and-running):
http://www.brewinfo.com/brewinfo/


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 14:04:48 -0400
From: i.brew2@juno.com
Subject: re-directed submission, Style Variations

(I sent this to Homebrew-request... in error, you returned it. I wasn't
sure so I am re-sending to the correct address now)

> On Oct. 3 Doug Moyer writes "is it a sin to brew beers that don't fit a
> style"
> I suppose some of us fashion ourselves to be scientists while others
> fashion ourselves to be artists. The answer probably isn't the same
for
> both types. If you set out to produce something specific and failed to
> hit the style, but still produced a quality beer, you may still be
> sattisfied with the effort if you were the artist type, but displeased
> with yourself if you were the scientific sort. If you were trying to
win
> a competition and missed the mark you might consider yourself a
failure,
> but if you were just trying to produce something to dazzle your guests
> and friends, who would have to tell them what it was "supposed" to have
> been? The last British style ale I tried to brew (from extract) found
> the local supply shop out of any kind of British yeast and I used Yeast
> Labs "Duseldorf Ale". Came out great! Hell, I wasn't going to
postpone
> my next batch because the yeast wasn't the right style!! Time is too
> short in supply for that! I think that the BEST situation is when we
> brew to please ourselves rather than our peers or our guests. It
really
> doesn't hurt my feelings if a Coors drinker thinks my Bitters are too
> heavy, I keep canned beer in the fridge for those guests, it's cheaper!

>
> On another note, I have been fortunate to be brewing some exceptionaly
> clear batches of late, but the head falls off after pouring. These are
> all malt extract with specialty grains or partial mash batches. I read
> about using torrified wheat to increase head retention, and I've seen
> that item with the specialty grains at the local outlet. If anyone
could
> provide specifics on using that or any other method to increase head
> density/retention I would appreciate it. I am using RO water to brew
and
> I bottle condition.
>
> Dave Blaine
> I.Brew2@Juno.Com
>
> Private E Mail fine. Thanks!
>


- --------- End forwarded message ----------

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 11:51:55 -0700
From: smurman@best.com
Subject: Wyeast strains


I started the possibility of botulism in starters thread (hey,
everyone needs a claim to fame), and recently mentioned ferulic acid
(which I'm sure Steve is busy researching right now), so I'm becoming
hesitant to make my pseudo-scientific postings. Hopefully with
everyone off at the GABF, I can sneak a post through w/o creating a
stir. Nah, what fun would that be? ;)

I recently tried making an Eam-stay Eer-bay (there actually is a beer
with this name in the Midwest somewhere. Let's see Anchor sue over
pig latin:) I decided to try Wyeast 2206 since I didn't want to add to
my yeast bank a strain I'll rarely use (the Anchor strain). Well,
for me it didn't work too well. I tried fermenting at 60F, and after
3 weeks it had only about 50% attenuation. I racked and dropped the
temp. to 50F and the yeast seems to be picking up. YMMV.

Thanks to Jeff McNally for getting an answer regarding Wyeast 1272 and
the PacMan strain. For those of you who aren't aware, I have a
listing of the common yeast strains and their origins at
http://www.best.com/~smurman/zymurgy/yeast.html. I get some email on
these, and right now Wyeast 1272 is the strain of speculation.
Personally, I've always wondered if it could be the Sam Adams strain.
Other major commercial yeast providers have a strain called "East
Coast" or "Brew Patriot" which is the Sam Adams ale strain. These
guys all try to copy each other, so I have to wonder if 1272 isn't Sam
Adams. I've never used it myself, can anyone comment on this
unscientific speculation?

SM (I am a scientist dammit)


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 13:07:00 -0500
From: blacksab@midwest.net (Harlan Bauer)
Subject: bulk priming/data point on insulation.

Kevin J. O'Donnell <kjo@penn.com> asks:

>1. Can you prepare a bulk priming solution - say 1 gallon - that can be
>used at bottlng rather than boil 3/4 cups of sugar in water at each
>bottling session? I understand that the proportions would have to be
>accurate for 1 gallon and that 1 pint or so would be used for each 5
>gallon batch that is being bottled. It could be kept in a sanitized
>gallon jug.

Sure! What I do is make up a stock solution (actually I make up one
concentration for kegs and one for bottles) and "can" it in 1-pint mason
jars. Whenever I need to prime some beer, I take a "sterile" jar off the
shelf, wipe the lid area, and pour it in. Extra bonus: no cooling.


FWIW, here's a data point on the benifits of insulation. I "raced" an
uninsulated sanke keg (my boiling kettle) against an insulated one (my mash
tun). Here are the results:



PROCEDURE:

1. Add 10-gal water to each vessel (10-gal @ 90*F)
2. Heat water to boiling with propane burners
3. Turn off heat, and measure temperature of water every 30-min for 2-hours

DATA:

- ----------------------------------------------------
Time MASH TUN BOILING KETTLE
(insulated) (uninsulated)
- ----------------------------------------------------
0-min ~212*F ~212*F
30 210 206
60 205 197
90 203 188
120 200 181
- ----------------------------------------------------

note: Mash tun is made from a sanke keg insulated with 1.5-in rigid
fiberglass insulation, and then covered in sheet aluminium. The only
uninsulated part is the bottom chine-area where it is heated.

TTYL,
Harlan


Harlan Bauer ...malt does more than Milton can
Carbondale, IL To justify God's ways to man.
<blacksab@midwest.net> --A.E. Houseman



------------------------------

Date: 3 Oct 1997 15:22:49 -0400
From: "John Penn" <john_penn@spacemail.jhuapl.edu>
Subject: All Grain Questions

Subject: Time:2:56 PM
OFFICE MEMO All Grain Questions Date:10/3/97

I would like to attempt my first all grain--unless you count my last
experiment where I tried 4# of grain in a single step infusion to make 1
gallon of scotch ale. I only ended up with about 6.5 bottles worth at 1.072
OG instead of an expected 1.088. It tasted good at bottling though and should
have some kick since the FG was about 1.010! I think I lost two bottles worth
to trub, and 1 bottles worth to excessive blowoff in a 1 gallon jug.
Anyway, I'd like to try this 2 step batch sparge to simplify the equipment
needed and the time required. The plan is to do a single step infusion in a
cooler with about 2.5 gallons of water total and 8# of grain. Then I plan to
quickly pour off/siphon/whatever that water and add an additional 2.5 gallons
of water to do a "mashout" at about 170F for 10-15 minutes. Then drain that
water. I am using 60-65% as an estimate for efficiency based on some of Kenny
Eddy's comments in the HBD. I expect to leave about 0.5 qts of water/# in the
grain--maybe that's a little high--so my 5 gallons would drop to 4 at the
start of boil and maybe 3.5 gallons at the end of boil yielding about a "1.055
ish" beer. Does this sound like a reasonable "batch sparge" plan? Can I pour
off the initial mash water and then do a mashout with the additional sparge
water? Does heating the wort from the one step mash constitute a mashout to
stabilize the enzymes in the initial pouroff? I'm not too worried about the
low efficiency that I expect but my questions concern the mashout step and the
2 step batch sparge. Thanks for the help.
John Penn


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 16:08:18 -0500
From: "Kostelac, John" <John.Kostelac@COMPAQ.com>
Subject: Tradition in Brewing

Cheers to Doug Moyer on his response to Alan Moen's Column in the 9/97
Brewing Techniques. I agree wholeheartedly with Doug that style
guidelines are important in labeling and competition. These help to
level the playing field. I further believe that for anyone to contend
that stepping out of those bounds makes innovation meaningless doesn't
quite get what innovation means.

I prefer not to go where everyone has gone before. I try nearly every
possible thing that comes to mind, and I drink it! So far, so good. One
day, one or the other of else will create a new style and a new
tradition for the next generation of homebrewers to step all over. I say
good luck and best wishes.

Thanks also to all who participate in HBD. I have learned much both
scientific and mythological about brewing. I appreciate ALL of the
information and ALL of the folks willing to take the time to share it.

John

The possibilities are endless!

JKostalot@aol.com



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 14:55:54 -0700
From: "Jim Pierce" <jimpierce@ibm.net>
Subject: Science "Talk" in Brewing

I have been a "lurker" on the HBD until today. What has really prompted my
participation has been the ongoing (outright droning) debate with regards to
postings having a scientific/technical content. It really seems to me that
some of the HBD participants are bemoaning the fact that they cannot
participate in the "science talk", since they lack the requisite knowledge
to even understand brewing science. What I have to say to those of you who
are calling for the HBD to tone down the "science talk" is to start reading
more and buy a good college dictionary! We should not even consider asking
the brewing scientists to "dumb down" their talk just so that it is
understandable to the ordinary brewer. I, for one, am a novice and I really
appreciate reading the comments of brewing scientists when they are at their
"most technical" with language. Some of the criticisms of "science talk"
have just been outright stupid. If you are simply not interested in brewing
science, or lack the will power to learn something new, then just skip those
messages containing "science talk." It is that simple folks! There, now that
I have put my "two cents" in I will not waste anymore bandwidth. I suggest
others do the same by "trashing" this thread. Lets move onto talk about beer
making and related issues, can we.

Cheers!

Jim Pierce

"I'm just a beer geek -- I don't need a reason to drink!"



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 15:25:22 -0700
From: "Bryan L. Gros" <gros@bigfoot.com>
Subject: brewing to style

Doug Moyer wrote:
> The sub heading of Alan Moen's column in the 9/97 Brewing Techniques
>states, "Style guidelines define the playing field of creativity.
>Brewers, like all artists, must recognize that innovation is meaningless
>outside the bounds of tradition." He starts off bitching about a
>particular beer that is far outside of the labelled style, and then
>begins a rant along the lines of the above quote. <snip>
>...What do the rest of you think? Is it a cardinal sin to brew beers that
>don't fit into a particular style? (I'm already consigned to hell for
>other reasons, why not a new one?) As I read the column, I initially
>thought I was missing his point, but he kept hammering at it...

Haven't read Alan's article yet, but I would encourage everyone,
homebrewers and professional brewers, to experiment. In brewpubs
I frequent, I generally order the special beer, not the regular ones.
I just hope that experimental beers are labeled as such, and that
when beers are labeled as a particular style, they resemble that
style.


- Bryan

gros@bigfoot.com
Oakland, CA

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 23:59:19 -0500
From: ajdel@mindspring.com (A. J. deLange)
Subject: Vienna Water Pt-I

Dave Draper asks about Vienna water. I have three profiles for that city,
one of which is the one Dave quoted and another of which is very close to
it. They are

Ca Carb Cl Mg Na SO4 pH Net Chg, mEq/L
V1 200 118 12 60 8 124 8.4 +10.37
V2 163 243 39 68 8 216 8.4 + 4.45
V3 200 120 12 60 8 125 8.4 +10.33

I am convinced that the "Carb" numbers represent the mg/L of carbonate (a
small proportion of the total) plus bicarbonate (the majority of the
total). pH infomation is not given and so must be supplied. I choose the pH
which causes the water sample to be electrically neutral (as it must in
fact be) but I don't ever allow a pH above 8.4 because that's about the
limits for potable water as given by the USEPA, UN, EEC, etc and I know
that Vienna water (praised for its qualities as a drinking water) isn't at
pH 11 which would be required to balance it accoding to the V1 and V3
profiles. Given that I limit the pH to 8.4 a whopping 10 mEq/L of anion are
required to balance two of the profiles and 4.5 to balance the third. Out
of 43 profiles I've studied, V1 and V3 are the worst in this regard!

So what's wrong here? If we look at V2 we see that it calls for less
calcium and lots more (nearly double) bicarbonate and sulfate. This brings
the balance closer to 0 as we would expect but not all the way. Clearly we
are interpreting something wrong or the data are bad. (interpreting the
carb number "as CaCO3" would help somewhat in the case of Vienna but would
throw other profiles which do balance off and the way data are published
they just don't look like "as CaCO3" numbers to me). A disturbing
possibility is that sometimes the numbers mean as bicarbonate and sometimes
they mean as CaCO3. They are fairly frequently labeled "mg/L carbonate" and
they are clearly not carbonate unless carbonate is interpreted to mean the
collective bicarbonate and carbonate species. As I said above this is how I
interpret it.

Note that any the analysis of any particular water sample should balance
(in fact analysts use that as a quality control check) but that a water
report you obtain from your water supplier may not simply because the
reported sodium level is based on the average of measurements made at times
different from the times at which the measurements on which the sulfate
level were made and so on. I suspect that this may be a factor as could be
errors in reporting, transcription, and as indicated above interpretation.

Irrespective of the source of the inconsistencies it is probably pretty
clear that any approximation one tries to make to a poorly ballanced water
spec will be a poor approximation as anything you actually synthesize must
balance. Given this it is probably also clear that the better the balance,
the better the approximation. In three subsequent posts I'll give three
formulations for each of the three profiles above. V2 can be most
successfully simulated with all ions within 23% fo the spec values.
Profiles V1 and V3 have errors of over 100% in sulfate and nearly 50% in
other ions.

The printouts should be self explanatory except for one point: the
formulations assume that the calcium carbonate is dissolved by sparging
with carbon dioxide and then aerating to reach the target pH (8.4). Anyone
desiring further explanation can e-mail me directly. We don't want to waste
too much space on this science stuff or there won't be any room for the
guys who don't like it to tell us why they don't like it.

A. J. deLange
- Numquam in dubio, saepe in errore.

- --> --> --> To reply remove "nosp" from address. <-- <--



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 23:59:23 -0500
From: ajdel@mindspring.com (A. J. deLange)
Subject: Vienna Water Part II

I hope the table columns don't get destroyed by automatic linewrapping!


Target City: Vienna1 Base Water: Deionized
Balancing pH 11.8636 is greater than 8.40 and is thus set to 8.40
Net charge (imbalance) at this pH: 10.3682 mEq/L


SALTS ADDED FOR THIS SYNTHESIS:
Sodium Chloride : 0.02 mg/L
Calcium Sulfate Dihydrate : 185.27 mg/L
Calcium Chloride Dihydrate : 26.14 mg/L
Magnesium Sulfate Heptahydrate : 394.80 mg/L
Calcium Carbonate : 127.47 mg/L
Magnesium Carbonate : 0.00 mg/L
Sodium Bicarbonate : 27.91 mg/L
Carbonic Acid : 2.48 mEq/L


COMPARISON OF TARGET AND SYNTHESIS:

TARGET SYNTHESIS
pRatio Pct Err
Vienna1
pH : 8.40 8.40
f1 : 0.0076 0.0077
f2 : 0.9749 0.9755
f3 : 0.0175 0.0169
Ionic Strength : 18.8557 15.4195
pfm : 0.0614 0.0562
Carbonates* : 1.9344 2.8482 mM/L +0.1680
+47.24%

Calcium* : 200.00 101.30 mg/L -0.2954
-49.35%
Carbonic : 0.91 1.35 mg/L +0.1734
+49.09%
Bicarbonate : 115.10 169.56 mg/L +0.1682
+47.31%
Carbonate : 2.03 2.89 mg/K +0.1527
+42.12%
Alkalinity (as CaCO3): 99.73 145.28 mg/L
Chloride* : 12.00 12.62 mg/L +0.0218
+5.14%
Magnesium* : 60.00 38.93 mg/L -0.1878
-35.11%
Sodium* : 8.00 7.65 mg/L -0.0197
-4.43%
Sulfate* : 125.00 257.24 mg/L +0.3134
+105.79%
Nitrate : 0.00 0.00 mg/L
RMS Log Error (Items with *): 0.20408 Corresponding % 59.9841

pHs : 7.18 7.29
Saturated WRT CaCO3? : Yes Yes
Langelier Index : 1.22 1.11 SI < 0 ~ Corrosion; SI > 0 ~
Occlusion
Ryznar Index : 5.97 6.17 RI < 6 ~ Occlusion; RI > 7 ~
Corrosion
pHe : 8.56 8.73
Saturated WRT CO2? : Yes Yes
CO2 Equilibrium Index: 0.16 0.33 EI < 0 ~ Gains CO2; EI > 0 ~
Loses CO2
Residual Alkalinity : -78.12 50.18 mg/L as CaCO3

A. J. deLange
- Numquam in dubio, saepe in errore.

- --> --> --> To reply remove "nosp" from address. <-- <--



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 23:59:27 -0500
From: ajdel@mindspring.com (A. J. deLange)
Subject: Vienna Water Part III

Target City: Vienna2 Base Water: Deionized
Balancing pH 10.9435 is greater than 8.40 and is thus set to 8.40
Net charge (imbalance) at this pH: 4.4527 mEq/L


SALTS ADDED FOR THIS SYNTHESIS:
Sodium Chloride : 0.35 mg/L
Calcium Sulfate Dihydrate : 69.15 mg/L
Calcium Chloride Dihydrate : 83.89 mg/L
Magnesium Sulfate Heptahydrate : 580.01 mg/L
Calcium Carbonate : 223.93 mg/L
Magnesium Carbonate : 0.00 mg/L
Sodium Bicarbonate : 28.33 mg/L
Carbonic Acid : 4.37 mEq/L


COMPARISON OF TARGET AND SYNTHESIS:

TARGET SYNTHESIS
pRatio Pct Err
Vienna2
pH : 8.40 8.40
f1 : 0.0075 0.0075
f2 : 0.9746 0.9748
f3 : 0.0178 0.0177
Ionic Strength : 20.9941 19.8221
pfm : 0.0643 0.0627
Carbonates* : 3.9836 4.7597 mM/L +0.0773
+19.48%

Calcium* : 163.00 128.64 mg/L -0.1028
-21.08%
Carbonic : 1.86 2.23 mg/L +0.0790
+19.94%
Bicarbonate : 236.95 283.17 mg/L +0.0774
+19.50%
Carbonate : 4.27 5.05 mg/K +0.0726
+18.20%
Alkalinity (as CaCO3): 202.25 241.01 mg/L
Chloride* : 39.00 40.67 mg/L +0.0182
+4.29%
Magnesium* : 68.00 57.20 mg/L -0.0751
-15.89%
Sodium* : 8.00 7.89 mg/L -0.0060
-1.36%
Sulfate* : 216.00 264.63 mg/L +0.0882
+22.52%
Nitrate : 0.00 0.00 mg/L
RMS Log Error (Items with *): 0.07111 Corresponding % 17.7902

pHs : 6.97 6.99
Saturated WRT CaCO3? : Yes Yes
Langelier Index : 1.43 1.41 SI < 0 ~ Corrosion; SI > 0 ~
Occlusion
Ryznar Index : 5.55 5.58 RI < 6 ~ Occlusion; RI > 7 ~
Corrosion
pHe : 8.87 8.95
Saturated WRT CO2? : Yes Yes
CO2 Equilibrium Index: 0.47 0.55 EI < 0 ~ Gains CO2; EI > 0 ~
Loses CO2
Residual Alkalinity : 46.08 115.69 mg/L as CaCO3

A. J. deLange
- Numquam in dubio, saepe in errore.

- --> --> --> To reply remove "nosp" from address. <-- <--



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 23:59:31 -0500
From: ajdel@mindspring.com (A. J. deLange)
Subject: Vienna Water - Part IV

Target City: Vienna3 Base Water: Deionized
Balancing pH 11.8602 is greater than 8.40 and is thus set to 8.40
Net charge (imbalance) at this pH: 10.3351 mEq/L


SALTS ADDED FOR THIS SYNTHESIS:
Sodium Chloride : 1.41 mg/L
Calcium Sulfate Dihydrate : 179.12 mg/L
Calcium Chloride Dihydrate : 24.35 mg/L
Magnesium Sulfate Heptahydrate : 395.20 mg/L
Calcium Carbonate : 132.40 mg/L
Magnesium Carbonate : 0.00 mg/L
Sodium Bicarbonate : 25.94 mg/L
Carbonic Acid : 2.58 mEq/L


COMPARISON OF TARGET AND SYNTHESIS:

TARGET SYNTHESIS
pRatio Pct Err
Vienna3
pH : 8.40 8.40
f1 : 0.0076 0.0077
f2 : 0.9749 0.9755
f3 : 0.0175 0.0169
Ionic Strength : 18.8725 15.3956
pfm : 0.0614 0.0561
Carbonates* : 1.9672 2.9225 mM/L +0.1719
+48.56%

Calcium* : 200.00 101.36 mg/L -0.2952
-49.32%
Carbonic : 0.92 1.39 mg/L +0.1774
+50.45%
Bicarbonate : 117.05 173.98 mg/L +0.1721
+48.64%
Carbonate : 2.07 2.96 mg/K +0.1564
+43.34%
Alkalinity (as CaCO3): 101.37 149.00 mg/L
Chloride* : 12.00 12.60 mg/L +0.0212
+5.00%
Magnesium* : 60.00 38.97 mg/L -0.1874
-35.05%
Sodium* : 8.00 7.65 mg/L -0.0193
-4.34%
Sulfate* : 125.00 253.97 mg/L +0.3079
+103.17%
Nitrate : 0.00 0.00 mg/L
RMS Log Error (Items with *): 0.20306 Corresponding % 59.6097

pHs : 7.18 7.27
Saturated WRT CaCO3? : Yes Yes
Langelier Index : 1.22 1.13 SI < 0 ~ Corrosion; SI > 0 ~
Occlusion
Ryznar Index : 5.95 6.15 RI < 6 ~ Occlusion; RI > 7 ~
Corrosion
pHe : 8.56 8.74
Saturated WRT CO2? : Yes Yes
CO2 Equilibrium Index: 0.16 0.34 EI < 0 ~ Gains CO2; EI > 0 ~
Loses CO2
Residual Alkalinity : -76.48 53.83 mg/L as CaCO3

A. J. deLange
- Numquam in dubio, saepe in errore.

- --> --> --> To reply remove "nosp" from address. <-- <--



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 20:41:43 -0400 (EDT)
From: AlannnnT@aol.com
Subject: alan Moen's column

Doug Moyer writes about Alan Moen's article in BT choosing to stifle
creativity.
I agree with Doug, that Alan's idea that artists should have limits placed on
creativity is ridiculous. And worse yet Alan says that artists should know
what those limits are. He was talking about himself and others who write and
produce art, not just the Homebrew community. It sounds like repressed
parochial school stuff. Where I went to college [art school in NYC} Alan
would considered the Devil himself.

As it relates to brewing, where would pumpkin ale and spiced holiday beers
fit into Alan's world?

However, I do agree with Alan on one point: If you are brewing and naming
beers to fit a style, then fit it should. I don't want my pub bought IPA to
be 'light' or "mild" or "sweet" or some other off style bastardization. If
you give it a label make it fit. But if you want to brew some "just good
beer" what buisness is it of mine if you make you pale ale with lager malt?
Just as long as you share some with me.

Personaly, let me thank Doug for giving me the excuse to post about Alan
Moen's article. I was incensed when I read it, but I thought I would be the
only one to take offense and I was going to let it slide.

Alan Talman
Homebrewer, with no limits.





------------------------------

Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 21:30:05 -0400
From: "Fred L. Johnson" <FLJohnson@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: Re: Toasting Grains

Ron Ritchie asked:

How long and at what temperature should he toast his already crushed =

malted barley: "Intuition tells me I should still be able to toast the gro=
und =

grain, albeit for a briefer period or, perhaps, at a lower temperature. Th=
us the =

obviousquestion: how long at what temp? Any ideas?"
- ------------
I, too, made the same "mistake" and proceeded to toast 1.25 lbs of of =

crushed 2 row American pale malt at 375=B0 for 15 minutes in a very shallow=
, =

very large pan in my preheated oven. The 5 gallons of ESB I made with it w=
as =

delicious! I made the same recipe later without precrushing the and grain=
s =

and toasted at the same temperature and for the same time. I enjoyed the =

mistake more. But that's only two batches. I intend to pursue the issue =

experimentally using different times and temperatures, just to get a better=
=

understanding of what these differences make in the final product.

Isn't this how someone came up with black and chocolate malts?
- -- =

Fred L. Johnson
Apex, North Carolina



------------------------------
End of HOMEBREW Digest #2523, 10/06/97
*************************************
-------

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