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HOMEBREW Digest #4643

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HOMEBREW Digest
 · 7 months ago

HOMEBREW Digest #4643		             Tue 02 November 2004 


FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
Digest Janitor: pbabcock at hbd.org


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Contents:
Split Rock 2004 HB Competition ("David Houseman")
Brewing a belgian (pacman)
is it legal ("Spencer W. Thomas")
Tap lines into my Freezerator question. ("whiplash@juno.com")
Beginner Lager Fermentation Question (Michael Fross)
Re: Beer at charity auction (Danny WIlliams)
Re: link of the week - phenolic ("Mike Racette")


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Date: Mon, 1 Nov 2004 22:18:57 -0500
From: "David Houseman" <david.houseman at verizon.net>
Subject: Split Rock 2004 HB Competition

We still need judges to sign up to judge the homebrew competition on
November 20th, at the Split Rock Resort in the Pocono's of Pennsylvania in
conjunction with their annual Micro Brew Festival. Judging will be on
Saturday, November 20th. Entry fees, $5, will go to the American Diabetes
Association. This is a sanctioned competition judging all beer, mead and
cider styles. Entries should be shipped to The Resort at Split Rock, One
Lake Drive, Lake Harmony, PA 18624, Attention: Shelly Kalins Lutz, for
receipt from November 6 to November 17. Two (2) brown or green bottles with
no markings are required. Any standard entry forms identifying the brewer
and the appropriate entry category/subcategory are acceptable. Any standard
homebrew competition entry and bottle identification forms are acceptable.
Take special note that we will use the former, 1999 BJCP style guidelines;
not the new 2004 guidelines. Get this from the BJCP web site at
www.bjcp.org.

Judges should contact Shelly Kalins Lutz [srinfo at splitrockresort.com] or me
to secure a position. Judges and Stewards can hand carry their entries if
they pre-register with payment. All judges and stewards are required to be
present by 8:30 so we can get started promptly at 9am. Checks should be
made out to The Resort At Split Rock. Judges will receive an entry to the
beer festival or entry to the beer dinner for their efforts and need to
indicate which they wish when they commit to participate. The BOS winner
will receive a complementary weekend for two at next year's Split Rock Beer
Fest as well. But just entering makes you a winner for helping a good
cause. More information will be available at the Split Rock web site:
http://www.splitrockresort.com/beerfest/. Or contact them at:
spevents at splitrockresort.com.

David Houseman
Competition Organizer
david.houseman at verizon.net



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

Date: Tue, 2 Nov 2004 00:30:29 -0700
From: pacman at edwardwadsworth.com
Subject: Brewing a belgian

I've been a homebrewer about three years. I have never brewed a belgian ale,
and would like to. What do I need to know? I brew all grain. I can't lager
or cold condition any beer, other than in the bottle! ;) I am curious as to
how the Belgian ales are so crisp, carbonated (more corn sugar at bottling),
and clear? Oh, and the ever elusive foam which is so hit and miss. Tips and
resources are appreciated.

Parker



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Date: Tue, 02 Nov 2004 09:04:22 -0500
From: "Spencer W. Thomas" <hbd at spencerwthomas.com>
Subject: is it legal

Steve Rockey asks whether it's legal to offer a batch of homebrew as an
item in his church's fund-raiser.

Here's a data point: The Michigan law, paraphrased, allows homebrewers
to give away up to 20 gallons of their beer per year. So you'd probably
be legal in Michigan. (Because you're not getting the money.)

The AHA has summaries of the various state laws available here:
http://beertown.org/homebrewing/legal.html

=S



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

Date: Tue, 2 Nov 2004 15:58:55 GMT
From: "whiplash at juno.com" <whiplash@juno.com>
Subject: Tap lines into my Freezerator question.


I am running tap lines into my chest freezer. Since the freezer is going to be
located in a closet out of sight I have decided to not go through the trouble
of building a collar for it. It also doesn't have any wiring in the top so I
drilled holes in the lid to run the lines through. They fit pretty tight but I
would still like to seal them so that I don't lose _too_ much efficiency. Does
anyone have any ideas? I would like to be able to replace the lines if need be
so it can't really be anything permanent. I was thinking of running some
silicone tub sealant around the lines where they meet the fridge but that
stuff kinda stinks and I am afraid of that affecting my beer. Silly Putty?


You may see this twice as it has also been posted on the B&VBB. Replies here,
there, and through private email are all cool wit' me.


Thanks guys!
Jay
Brewin' Rehab Homebrews at
The Boilover Brauhaus
Milford MA 01757



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

Date: Tue, 2 Nov 2004 10:10:13 -0600
From: Michael Fross <michael at fross.org>
Subject: Beginner Lager Fermentation Question

Hello all,

I've been brewing for many many years, and have finally decided to
brew a lager. However I have a couple of questions on fermentation
that I'm hoping someone could help me out with.

I've brewed last Sunday and everything went very smooth and to plan.
The beer is currently setting in primary at 50F.

1. I'm planning on leaving it in the fridge at 50F for primary
fermentation for 2 or 3 weeks. This long of a primary fermentation is
not something I would do for an ale as I wouldn't want the beer to sit
on the yeast that long. Is this the right approach? Too long? Too
short? How long does a lager normally take to ferment in primary?

2. I'll then move it to room temperature for three days to perform a
diacyedal (spelling) rest.

3. I'll then crash cool it to 35F and lager it for about a month. I
was thinking about slowly dropping the temperature a few degrees a day
as I've read. However, after talking to the folks at my local brewery
(2 Brothers outside Chicago), they said there was no need to slowly
drop the temperature as they could never afford to do something like
that. They just crash it. My thought was their tanks have huge volume
and there would be less yeast shock as it cooled then in a 5 gallon
glass carboy.

I probably should have mentioned that I'm making a Vienna Lager, OG:
1.048 using White Labs Oktoberfest/Marzen yeast.

Any pointers would be appreciated.

Regards,

Frosty



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

Date: Tue, 2 Nov 2004 15:20:15 -0500
From: Danny WIlliams <dbwill at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Beer at charity auction

> I have been asked to make a beer for the highest bidder in a silent auction
> for our church's "Wurstmart." (Its OK, we're Lutheran!)
> Is it legal? I'm not selling the beer, I'm offering my service...or at
> least the product of my service.

IANAL, but I think in most parts of the US you would get yourself (and
maybe the church) in trouble if you "sold" your beer at an auction.

Perhaps you could auction a beer making lesson instead. Buyer could do
the whole thing (with your instruction) if they are so inclined, or do
as little as just pitching the yeast and picking up the beer a couple
of weeks later. As long as they do the pitching, I think they are the
ones that officially made the beer.


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

Date: Tue, 2 Nov 2004 13:22:54 -0700
From: "Mike Racette" <mike.racette at hydro-gardens.com>
Subject: Re: link of the week - phenolic


Thanks for posting the "link of the week", Bob. I think I speak for most of
us when I say that it is much appreciated.

Sure would be interesting to know which breweries and beers had the
"abnormal" amounts of phenolics analyzed in the studies.



------------------------------
End of HOMEBREW Digest #4643, 11/02/04
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