Microbrewed Adventures - Charles Papazian [117]
Place crushed grains in 2 gallons (7.6 l) of 150-degree F (68 C) water and let steep for 30 minutes. Then strain out (and rinse with 3 quarts [3 l] hot water) and discard the crushed grains, reserving the approximately 2.5 gallons (9.5 l) of liquid to which you will now add malt extract and 120-minute hops. Bring to a boil.
The total boil time will be 120 minutes. When 10 minutes remain, add the Irish moss. When 5 minutes remain, add the 5-minute hops. After a total wort boil of 120 minutes, turn off the heat.
Immerse the covered pot of wort in a cold-water bath and let sit for 30 minutes, or the time it takes to have a couple of homebrews.
Then strain out and sparge hops and direct the hot wort into a sanitized fermenter to which 2.5 gallons (9.5 l) of cold water has been added. Bring the total volume to 5 gallons (19 l) with additional water if necessary. Aerate the wort very well.
Pitch the yeast when temperature of wort is about 70 degrees F (21 C). Once visible signs of fermentation are evident, ferment at temperatures of about 55 degrees F (12.5 C) for about 1 week, or until fermentation shows signs of calm and stopping. Rack from your primary to a secondary fermenter and add the hop pellets for dry hopping. If you have the capability, “lager” the beer at temperatures between 35 and 45 degrees F (1.5–7 C) for 5 weeks.
Prime with sugar and bottle or keg when complete.
GEORGE KILLIAN’S IRISH RED ALE FROM PELLFORTH
TARGET ORIGINAL GRAVITY: 1.067 (16.4 B)
APPROXIMATE FINAL GRAVITY: 1.018 (4.5 B)
IBU: ABOUT 25
APPROXIMATE COLOR: 14 SRM (28 EBC)
ALCOHOL: 6.6% BY VOLUME
All-Grain Recipe for 5 gallons (19 l)
5 lbs.: (2.3 kg) pale malt
4.5 lbs.: (2 kg) Munich malt
1 lb.: (454 g) crystal malt (10-L)
8 oz.: (225 g) home-toasted pale malt
1 oz.: (28 g) French Strisselspalt hops 3% alpha (3 HBU/84 MBU)—120 minutes boiling
½ oz.: (14 g) Mt. Hood hops 6% alpha (3 HBU/84 MBU)—120 minutes boiling
½ oz.: (14 g) Santiam hops—5 minutes boiling
1/3 oz.: (10 g) Santiam hop pellets—dry hopping
¼ tsp.: (1 g) powdered Irish moss
German Altbier or German ale yeast
¾ cup: (175 ml measure) corn sugar (priming bottles) or 0.33 cups (80 ml) corn sugar for kegging
Spread 8 oz. of whole pale malt on a cookie sheet and toast in a moderate oven until you hear popping noises and smell the aroma of toasted malt. Do not toast to a dark brown. Cool this malt before crushing.
A step infusion mash is employed to mash the grains. Add 11 quarts (10.5l) of 140-degree F (60 C) water to the crushed grain, stir, stabilize and hold the temperature at 132 degrees F (53 C) for 30 minutes. Add 5.5 quarts (5.2l) of boiling water, add heat to bring temperature up to 155 degrees F (68 C) and hold for about 30 minutes. Then raise temperature to 167 degrees F (75C), lauter and sparge with 3.5 gallons (13.5 l) of 170-degree F (77 C) water. Collect about 5.5 gallons (21 l) of runoff. Add 120-minute hops and bring to a full and vigorous boil.
The total boil time will be 120 minutes. When 10 minutes remain, add the Irish moss. When 5 minutes remains, add the 5-minute hops. After a total wort boil of 120 minutes, turn off the heat and place the pot (with cover on) in a running cold-water bath for 30 minutes. Continue to chill in the immersion or use other methods to chill your wort. Then strain and sparge the wort into a sanitized fermenter. Bring the total volume to 5 gallons (19 l) with additional cold water if necessary. Aerate the wort very well.
Pitch the yeast when temperature of wort is about 70 degrees F (21 C). Ferment at about 70 degrees F (21 C) for about 1 week, or until fermentation shows signs of calm and stopping. Rack from your primary to a secondary fermenter and add the hop pellets for dry hopping. If you have the capability, “cellar” the beer at about 55 degrees F (12.5 C) for about 2 weeks.
Prime with sugar and bottle or keg when complete.
Malt Extract Recipe for 5 gallons (19 l)
8 lbs.: (3.6 kg) amber malt extract or 6.4 lbs. (2.9 kg) amber dried malt extract
1 lb.: (454 g) crystal