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HOMEBREW Digest #5199

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HOMEBREW Digest
 · 7 months ago

HOMEBREW Digest #5199		             Thu 28 June 2007 


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


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Contents:
corn vs rice (leavitdg)
saccharine ("Stevens, Jonathan C")
re: Olive Oil (Raj B Apte)
A.J. tears it up in Victoria (Scott/Linda Bruslind)" <analabor@peak.org>
Biofuels and German Beer Prices ("Peter A. Ensminger")
Wormwood (leavitdg)
Fighting infection with Campden tablets (Doug Moyer)


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Date: Thu, 21 Jun 2007 06:42:36 -0400
From: leavitdg at plattsburgh.edu
Subject: corn vs rice

Pat;
That is very interesting. I guess that calculating the amount of hops to add
to the second batch would be the challenge. I appreciate the input and will
now have to put some additional thought to this.
Darrell



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

Date: Thu, 21 Jun 2007 06:16:00 -0400
From: "Stevens, Jonathan C" <Jonathan.Stevens at dhs.gov>
Subject: saccharine

A.J.,

Duchess uses saccharine, most definitely not fermentable.

Chad Stevens
QUAFF
San Diego


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

Date: Thu, 21 Jun 2007 11:08:02 -0700 (PDT)
From: Raj B Apte <raj_apte at yahoo.com>
Subject: re: Olive Oil


OK, guys, help a simple engineer understand this. I could:

1. shave some home-made, well-aged soap into hot water,
dissolve, titrate to pH 7, and dump into wort. The soap is
about 50% olive oil, 40% cocoanut oil, 9% beef tallow, and
1% silk fiber, plus food grade lye.

2. saponify a solution by adding olive oil to water in the
blender. titrate lye slowly, while blending, to pH 8-9.
Blend long enough to allow complete saponification, titrate
to pH 7 with lactic acid, and then dump into wort.

I guess option 2 sounds best. Is this close to the right
idea?

raj






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

Date: Fri, 22 Jun 2007 15:58:21 -0700
From: "Analysis_Lab (Scott/Linda Bruslind)" <analabor at peak.org>
Subject: A.J. tears it up in Victoria

A.J. did a bang-up job presenting his work on color and Principal
Component Analysis. I got more from his talk and kind conversation
afterward than the $365 workshop Dr. Karl Siebert led in Savannah two
years ago. Clear, relevant and insightful, the ASBC is fortunate to
have A.J.'s participation.
OK, enough platitudes; looking forward to seeing how beers of
visually-distinct colors can better be discriminated/described
analytically. If we and our Spectronic Genesys 5 can be of help, let us
know.
Regards,
Scott Bruslind


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

Date: Wed, 27 Jun 2007 01:32:57 -0400
From: "Peter A. Ensminger" <ensmingr at twcny.rr.com>
Subject: Biofuels and German Beer Prices

Some recent news from "The Independent" : www.independent.co.uk/

Cheers!
Peter A. Ensminger
Syracuse, NY
Apparent Rennerian: [394, 79.9]

Biofuels to blame as beer prices soar 40 per cent in Germany

Biofuels may be good for the environment, but they are bad news for
German beer drinkers. Prices in the country's pubs look set to rise by
40 per cent this year, because Germany's farmers are growing less barley
for beer production and more crops for biodiesel and bioethanol.

The head of the German brewers' association, Richard Weber, has caused
outrage among friends of the annual Oktoberfest beer jamboree by
predicting the hefty price rise. He pointed out that the German barley
crop has been halved this year and that prices have soared by 50 per
cent within 12 months. Poor-quality harvests, caused by unusually hot
weather, have not helped either.

As a result, Germany's brewers, which insist on the purity of their beer
and offer organic brands to emphasise their green-tinged credentials,
have turned over a new leaf. They are now demanding an end to the use of
crops to make fuel.

"The energy and food sectors are competing for the same raw materials
and the same acreage," said Mr Weber.




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

Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 08:05:30 -0400
From: leavitdg at plattsburgh.edu
Subject: Wormwood

I just bottled a batch of Red Ale, to which I added Blue Spruce tips, and
wormwood. It has a VERY strong flavor, a flavor that I think derived mostly
from the Wormwood/ Artemisia Absinthium.

Have any of you guys used this, and if so how much? I put 1/2 oz of the herb
into my boil, and I think that this was, perhaps two times what I should have
used, based upon the strength of the flavor.

This is the recipe:

9 lb Pale Malt
3 lb Flaked Maize
1 lb Caravienne
.75 lb corn sugar

39ibu Fuggles and N. Brewer Hops
.5lb Fresh Blue Spruce Tips
.5 oz wormwood

OG 1.067
FG 1.014
%abv 7

Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Darrell




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

Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 17:38:01 -0700 (PDT)
From: Doug Moyer <shyzaboy at yahoo.com>
Subject: Fighting infection with Campden tablets

My latest batch (a low alcohol hoppy brown ale)
developed a white pelicle during fermentation. I
gently skimmed off as much as I could before I added
the dry hops. When I transferred to carboys (from the
cylindroconical), the pelicle had returned (covering
the floating hops). I transferred out from under that
stuff, hopefully leaving most of it behind.

The beer has been in the carboys for about a week now
(clearing with gelatin). There are a couple of dots on
the surface, so there is obviously still some
infection.

I want to keg the beer tomorrow. Can I use Campden
tablets to prevent further infection? (I understand
that any infection byproducts are not going to
magically disappear with the addition of the Campden
tablets...)

If that will work, how much should I use for five
gallons? I assume I would crush the tablets and add
them to the keg before filling. Correct?

Brew on!
Doug Moyer
Troutville, VA




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End of HOMEBREW Digest #5199, 06/28/07
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