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HOMEBREW Digest #4548

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HOMEBREW Digest
 · 8 months ago

HOMEBREW Digest #4548		             Tue 22 June 2004 


FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
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Contents:
RE: Chestnut Beer? ("TOLLEY Matthew")
5th Annual Lallemand Scholarship- 2004 Winner Announced! ("Rob Moline")
Subject: leaking spot weld on corny keg ("Henry St.Pierre")
Re: Chestnut Beer? ("Mike Dixon")
Berliner weiss (Marc Sedam)
boiling berliner weisse (Raj B Apte)
Aluminum Care (mbauer)


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Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2004 11:15:24 +1000 (EST)
From: "TOLLEY Matthew" <matthew.tolley at atsis.gov.au>
Subject: RE: Chestnut Beer?

>A friend from Corsica has been telling me about "Chestnut Beer" they
>make there. No idea if it's actual beer with chestnuts or if it's
>another kind of alcohol made with chestnuts.

It's called Pietra, and it's brewed by the Brasserie Pietra in Furiani,
France. By a probably meaningless coincidence I tried it for the first
time on Saturday night. A small blurb in the latest issue of Australian
Gourmet Traveller magazine referred to the Australian Chestnut Company
(http://www.cheznuts.com.au), an importer of chestnut flour and chestnut
beer. Christoph Zierholz happened to be in Melbourne last week and
picked up a couple of bottles which he was kind enough to share. The
beer is indeed made with chestnut flour in the mash. It was pleasant
enough - sort of biere de garde'ish.

Cheers!
Matt in Canberra, Australia
http://canberrabrewers.org


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

Date: Mon, 21 Jun 2004 23:33:43 -0500
From: "Rob Moline" <jethrogump at mchsi.com>
Subject: 5th Annual Lallemand Scholarship- 2004 Winner Announced!

5th Annual Lallemand Scholarship- 2004 Winner Announced!

Lallemand is pleased to announce that the winner of the 5th Annual 2004
Lallemand Scholarship, drawn at random from entries submitted by members of
the American Homebrewers Association at the National Homebrewers Conference
in Las Vegas, Nevada on June 19th, 2004 is John McGill, of Bristol, TN.
John is a long time brewer, sporadically brewing since 1968, but in
recent years having become totally re-engaged to the degree that he brews on
an all stainless system that puts many brewpubs to shame! His enthusiasm for
brewing, both science and art, make him an ideal candidate for the Concise
Course at the World Brewing Academy/Siebel Institute!
The Lallemand Scholarship is awarded annually to a member of the
American Homebrewers Association and includes full tuition to the Concise
Course at Siebel, plus a stipend of $ 1,000 US to assist with travel and
accommodations.
For more information, go to
http://www.beertown.org/homebrewing/scholarship.html

Cheers!
Rob Moline
Lallemand
AHA Board of Advisors

"Have You Been To Beer Heaven?"
http://www.beertown.org/homebrewing/scholarship.html

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

Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2004 01:01:02 -0400
From: "Henry St.Pierre" <hankstar at usadatanet.net>
Subject: Subject: leaking spot weld on corny keg

Tad,
Find the leak or a close area to the leak. File or sand the area about the
leak. Spend 2 or 3 bucks on some JB weld and follow the directions.
Regards,
Hank



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

Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2004 06:20:47 -0400
From: "Mike Dixon" <mpdixon at ipass.net>
Subject: Re: Chestnut Beer?

> From: Alexandre Enkerli <aenkerli at indiana.edu>
> A friend from Corsica has been telling me about "Chestnut Beer" they
> make there. No idea if it's actual beer with chestnuts or if it's
> another kind of alcohol made with chestnuts.
> Anyone ever heard of such a thing?

Pietra is the beer's name.
http://www.beeradvocate.com/beer/rate_results/2977/7195/
http://www.worldclassbeer.com/france.htm
http://www.cheznuts.com.au/beer.htm

I thought it was pretty mediocre. I suspect I did not try a fresh bottle
however.

Cheers,
Mike Dixon
Wake Forest, NC
http://www.ipass.net/mpdixon




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

Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2004 09:44:42 -0400
From: Marc Sedam <marc_sedam at unc.edu>
Subject: Berliner weiss

Chad,

How sour is sour? How about MORE sour than lemonade. The bottle of
Berliner weiss I picked up in Germany (Kindl, I think) had a sourness
more akin to lemon juice. OK, not quite that sour...but not far off
either. I seem to recall the pH usually is in the low 3's...3.2
wouldn't be unusual. But all my stuff is at home right now. Think sour
enough for a whole group of people to say "This is too sour but the beer
is German and therefore correct. We can adjust this by putting sickly
sweet syrups in it."

I've found that an entire lactic fermentation will just give you
vinegar. I've been toying with splitting the batch in half and
fermenting half with L. delbruckii and half with a regular ale yeast.

Cheers!
Marc


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

Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2004 13:52:07 -0700 (PDT)
From: Raj B Apte <raj_apte at yahoo.com>
Subject: boiling berliner weisse

I'm not sure where the idea of only lightly boiling
Berliner Weisse comes from. The major drawback to an
unboiled wort is DMS. In my experience, DMS does eventually
moderate, but it may take 6-12 months. Giving the wort a
good 30 minute vigorous boil is my preferred method. Also,
why do the sour mash model? I mash, boil, and pitch in the
usual way (but with bacteria pitched first and yeast
pitched second). It will not get too sour--the bacteria
will give out around pH 3.5. If you use soft water, that
will be just right. For harder water pH 3.5 may be a bit
too sour.

raj






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

Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2004 18:07:52 -0500
From: mbauer at iupui.edu
Subject: Aluminum Care

One of my aluminum brew pots lost the black oxidation layer while pre-boiling
brewing water. I have since used the pot several times and the oxidation
layer has not returned. I have two questions for the collective regarding
oxidation of Al.

1) How do I restore the oxdation layer to this pot?
2) What can be done to keep the oxidation layer intact in other Al pots?

Thanks for the info.

Mark Bauer
Indianapolis



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End of HOMEBREW Digest #4548, 06/22/04
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