Club Blog
August 4, 2010 - Post By: Ryan TJ
Meeting notes for Tuesday July 27th
Wow, what a great meeting. There were some awesome beers and meads tonight. It was a good variety of new brewer to seasoned ones. Even the new daddy showed up. Congrats Andy, let us know when he can say attenuation!If you'd like to write an article or review for the site let me know. Articles help new brewers, site traffic and ad revenue. It does not have to be the ultimate resource, just a starting point with were to go from there.
Dues:
We'll be re-upping the dues in Sept/Oct. Yearly dues are $5 a year, or $6 if you'd like to do paypal. Dues go for site hosting and covering NHC and competition costs.
Competitions:
We'll be doing a friendly lawn mower beer competition Thursday Aug 26th. Beers will be judged by popular opinion on what a lawn mower beer is. So submit what ever you like but it will be judges by your peers against their idea of a lawn mower beer. If you'd like to host this 3 hour meeting let me know.
For fall we were thinking of doing a iron brewer competition. There would be 2 or 3 rounds, The first round would be a easily accessible secret ingredient supplied by the brewer. We're trying to get the 2nd and third round secret ingredient sponsored (free).
Bulk Buys:
We'll be placing a bulk hop purchase from Farmhouse brewing supply, http://www.
We're also making a bulk honey buy in Sept. for fresh harvest raw (none heated) honey. Its $22/gallon or $110/5 gallons. Let me know.
Remember to tip the wait staff at Binkies or bring some extra homebrew for them. They put up with us and our tasting glasses.
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June 29, 2010 - Post By: richt
Notes to Self...
I haven't posted in a super long time, and I'm sure my loyal readers are pining away for a new entry.... wait, who am I kidding? Anyways, in keeping with part of the original purpose of this blog for tracking my progress as a brewer, here's some updates and notes on what's been going on in my beer world.March 19, 2010 - Post By: richt
ImPale
Now that I am mostly through the first keg of the last 15 gallon batch I brewed, here's a quick update. This beer is calculated around 105 IBUs, definitely Double IPA range, but at an original gravity of around 1.050, it is an American Pale. I've brewed this overly hoppy but low gravity style a few times now, and I'm jumping on the Imperial bandwagon by calling it an Imperial Pale (ImPale). Despite the high IBUs, it isn't overly bitter. A bunch of the IBUs come from the 3 ounces of first wort hops, so although they add a lot of bitterness, it is much smoother than a 60 minute addition and adds a massive amount of hop flavor. On top of that there's tons of late additions for even more flavor and aroma. Here's the hop bill:- FWH: 1 oz Summit (18.5% AA), 1 oz Centennial (8.7%), 1 oz Amarillo (7.5%)
- 60 minutes: 1 oz Warrior (15.4%), .25 oz Magnum (13.5%)
- 10 minutes: 1.5 oz Summit, 1.5 oz Centennial, 1.5 oz Amarillo
- 5 minutes: 2 oz Simcoe (11.9%), 2 oz Columbus (14%)
- Flameout: 2 oz Simcoe (11.9%), 2 oz Columbus (14%)
February 13, 2010 - Post By: richt
First 15 gallon batch
- 17 lbs Briess 2row
- 15 lbs Munton's Maris Otter
- 1.6 lbs Dingeman's Cara45 (formerly known as CaraMunich)
January 29, 2010 - Post By: richt
Assorted Updates
January 26, 2010 - Post By: Ryan TJ
Pumpkin Braggot
My wife likes pumpkin beer and I had been saying I'd brew one for a while. Well a co-worker gave me some baking pumpkins so I decided to try it. However I have been dabbling in meads and I do like to experiment so I decided to make a Pumpkin braggot.Constructing a recipe:
I thought about what flavors go well with pumpkin. I figured some raisin and toffee flavors would go well and used some crystal 120 with a touch of pale chocolate malt for some toast flavor. Some 2 row and pumpkin in the mash. Some Honey, cinnamon, all spice and nutmeg (1g each per gallon). I targeted 12 to 15 IBU with hallertau and strisselspalt. I used BM45 wine yeast. This yeast does well in my Elderberry meads so figured what the heck.
My recipe
January 2, 2010 - Post By: Ryan TJ
New Years & Blue Moon Brew
I was able to brew an American Brown on New years eve, which was a blue moon also.December 29, 2009 - Post By: Ryan TJ
Winter Darkness
The details of our competition are getting filled in everyday and prize donations are coming in one by one. With 4 weeks left there is still time to brew a lower gravity batch! hmmmDecember 15, 2009 - Post By: richt
Speed Brew
Kristen made plans for New Years and I'm running low on hoppy session beer so I am going to run a quick experiment on speed brewing this Saturday. I'm still working out the hop schedule, but I'm basically going to brew a similar beer to the SMaSH APA that I'm drinking right now. Kristen loves this beer, but I don't have any more Summit hops on hand so what I think I'm going to do for this 10 gallon batch is either use an all Munich or all Maris Otter base to get me around 1.045, first wort hop with either Cascade or Centennial, a small 60 minute addition of Magnum or Columbus, load up at 10 minutes and flameout with Cascade and Centennial (I'm thinking 3 ounces at each time?), then keg hop with Columbus.November 30, 2009 - Post By: Ryan TJ
Belgian Stout
This weekend I, Ryan, put together a recipe based on a Russian Imperial Stout but with a Belgian twist. I wanted to brew a Belgian style stout like Ellezelloise Hercule Stout and others I had seen.What makes it Belgian? I used Belgian yeast, Belgian hops, Belgian specialty grains and Belgian soft brown sugar. Check out the recipe. The recipe was also based on what I had on hand. Its fermenting at 66 this morning. Some oak cubes might be good in a gallon of this.
November 23, 2009 - Post By: richt
Belgian Golden Strong Update
I finally got around to sampling the progress of my 10 gallon batch of Belgian Golden Strong last night. Here was the recipe:25 lbs Castle Pils
5 lbs table sugar
5 oz Czech Saaz @ 90
The OG came in at 1.076 (low efficiency still) and around 30 IBUs, I'll have to check BeerSmith for the exact number. I split the batch between two fermenters and fermented both with Wyeast VSS strains from earlier in the year. I pitched WY3739 Flanders Golden Ale (rumored to be the Gulden Draak strain) in one and WY3864 Canadian/Belgian Ale (the Unibroue strain) in the other. I pitched big starters of both at 64, where it stayed for a day or so before active fermentation began, then I let the temp free rise over the next few days to the low 70s, then turned on the aquarium heaters and slowly ramped up until the heaters were maxed out at around 80. I kept them there for the next 2 weeks or so (about 3 weeks at high temps total), then turned the heaters off and let them rest for another week at cellar temp, which is around 63 right now.
The Flanders Golden finished at 1.002, making the ABV 9.6%. It tasted dry (duh), but the alcohol was very obvious. I tasted and smelled some of the fruity esters and a bit of spicy phenols, but because the sample was warm and uncarbonated, this tasted more like a white wine than a beer. The alcohol, although it's not hot fusel alcohols, is too much in the front, so I decided that this one is going to stay in secondary at cellar temps for a while to round out a bit.
The Unibroue finished at 1.005, making the ABV 9.3% The sample was delicious already. Pear and apple aroma and flavor, a little bitterness to back it up, a little bready malt, delicious. Alcohol is present, which I expect in a 9% beer, but the other stuff isn't overwhelmed. This is getting kegged up in the next couple of days. Hopefully I've got enough tubing and fittings laying around so that I can use my other regulator and carb this up higher than my other beers.
I'm also thinking about entering some comps in the next few months. I'm really happy with my APA and Smoked Brown and want to get some feedback on my beers now that I'm building my water, controlling fermentation, and have gone AG. I'm looking at these comps in particular:
Big Beers, Belgians & Barleywines Festival
Upper Mississippi Mash Out
Great Northern BrewHaha
Durango, CO Ska Brewing Pro/AM
November 6, 2009 - Post By: richt
Finally Made the Jump to All Grain!
September 15, 2009 - Post By: Ryan TJ
Bye Bye Miss American Keggle
I heard from a local brewer, who I had inquired about damaged kegs, that there is a keg shortage or will be. There are no American producers and the industry is switching to plastic. My future keggle prospects look dim.November 6, 2009 - Post By: richt
Labor Day Update
Wow, haven't posted since July! Lots of beer adventures the second half of the summer, here they are in short form.August 4, 2009 - Post By: Ryan TJ
Just a thought
Just thinking that our club could use Blogger.com instead of me writing or integrating a blog in to our site. I could pull in the RSS feed from this blog and display it on our site so it can be read from our site also. Members would have to login to Blogger.com to post messages.November 6, 2009 - Post By: richt
It's Finally Done!
July 15, 2009 - Post By: richt
It's Brewing Season
After a long time with no updates, I've got lots of brewing news. We're hosting a party on July 11 so I've been trying to brew like a madman. I've also scored a new 7 cubic foot chest freezer (thank you Craigslist!) so I need to get 5 or 6 beers kegged to fill it. Hopefully in the next few weeks I'll be purchasing a temp controller, 5 or 6 Perlick taps, a few more kegs, and a couple of CO2 distributors. I've got a double distributor so the plan is to run my beers off one 5 way distributor and then run a 3 way distributor off the other regulator so I can have a line for a higher carbed beer, a soda, and one for utility cleaning and purging.Right now I've got a Saison from the AHA Big Brew that I split with my friend Ryan from the RAZE homebrew club. I think I posted the Saison recipe already. I fermented this with WLP565, but had to finish it with US-05 because I couldn't get it below 1.016. After pitching the US-05 it dropped to 1.012. I was worried that it would finish too sweet but it still tastes fairly dry. It's been in the keg a couple of weeks now and it's coming around. Appearance wise it's straw colored, a little cloudy, and has a nice fluffy white head that sticks around for a while and leaves nice lacing. Aroma is yeast and mild pepper and fruit. It has a nice light body, despite the almost 6% ABV, nicely balanced bitterness, and a good mix of fruit and spice. Overall, pretty tasty, but I like Ryan's version a little better that he fermented with the French Saison strain from Wyeast.
I also kegged half of the 10 gallon batch of Hoppin Mad IPA that I brewed on Memorial Day. This beer is fresh, hoppy, and awesome! Here's the recipe for a 10 gallon batch:
- 1 lb C60
- .5 lb C120
- .5 lb Vienna
- 13 lbs Briess Golden Light DME
- 1 lb sugar
- 1.5 oz Warror at 60
- .5 oz Warrior/1 oz Simcoe/1 oz Amarillo at 15
- 1.5 oz Simcoe/1.5 oz Amarillo at 5
- 1.5 oz Simcoe/1.5 oz Amarillo at flameout
- .5 oz Simcoe/.5 oz Amarillo keghop
I brewed 10 gallons of Patersbier on Thursday morning that is now bubbling over thanks to the healthy repitch of Wyeast 3787 that I harvested from the cake of the first version of this beer. That brings my 2009 total to 70 gallons so far, which will hit 80 when I brew 10 gallons of APA with a mix of Centennial and Cascade sometime next week.
I also got the chance on Tuesday to help Tod Fyten of Mantorville Brewing Company brew a batch of Stagecoach Amber Ale. I met Tod when RAZE toured his brewery a couple of months ago. He mentioned increasing production over the summer and I volunteered to help, which I'm hoping to do once a week for the rest of the summer if we can get our schedules to match. Tod's a cool guy with many years of experience in the craft brewing industry and tons of connections, so listening to his stories was a good time, and it was really interesting to see the differences and similarities between the commercial and the homebrew process. There's definitely some homebrewer's ingenuity happening there. Plus, seeing 7 or 8 sacks of malt in a mash tun that wasn't even half full, 128(?) gallons of beer in the kettle, and giant bags of hops in the freezer was a pretty cool experience and definitely gave me the itch. Ten gallons just doesn't seem big enough now!
May 26, 2009 - Post By: richt
Man Down
Where did the last 2 weekends go and why did I not brew? Kristen went to plant the big garden in Red Wing today and declared my Saaz and Horizon rhizomes dead, but she harvested a Cascade and a Centennial rhizome to put in the extra 2 mounds, so it would be nice to get a little extra production. My new hop count is 2 Cascade, 2 Centennial and 1 Zeus. The original 3 plants are all around 4 feet and growing strong. While she was there, I finally knocked out a 10 gallon batch of IPA. I went off of the grain bill for last summer's short lived Simcoe IPA (which only lasted 13 days in the keg) which was based on Tasty McDole's IPA on the Jamil Show. The hop schedule was inspired by Surly Furious. Here's the recipe:- 1 lb Caramel 60
- .5 lb Caramel 120
- .5 lb Vienna
- 13 lbs DME
- 1 lb cane sugar
- 1.5 oz Warrior (60 min)
- .5 oz Warrior (15 min)
- 1 oz Simcoe (15 min)
- 1 oz Amarillo (15 min)
- 1.5 oz Simcoe (5 min)
- 1.5 oz Amarillo (5 min)
- 1.5 oz Simcoe (flameout)
- 1.5 oz Amarillo (flameout)
- 1 oz Simcoe (dryhop)
- 1 oz Amarillo (dryhop)
April 14, 2009 - Post By: richt
What a Weekend!
I had Friday and Monday off so I decided to get some brewing chores done.- On Friday I cleaned and sanitized 2 kegs, kegged my Patersbier, harvested the yeast from the Patersbier for a tripel I'll brew sometime, and built a 50 foot immersion chiller for less than 50 bucks. Copper has gotten really cheap!
- I spent Saturday and Sunday putting up the new hop towers, transplanting my Cascade, Centennial, and Zeus, and planting my new Saaz and Horizon rhizomes. I used PVC for the towers, one tower per plant. I sank a 5 foot section of 2 inch PVC into the ground, then put a 10 foot 1.5 inch pipe inside the 2 incher. That gave me 7 feet above ground, so I added another 5 feet to get a total of 12. Not super high, but good enough. It does sway a little, but hopefully they'll stay standing in the wind. I went with the individual towers because I thought this would be the easiest way to keep the different varieties separate.
- On Monday morning I brewed my first 10 gallon batch, an APA. Getting 12 gallons of wort to boil didn't take as long as anticipated, and I chilled to 52 in 25 minutes with my new ugly chiller (a little too cold!), but siphoning was a pain. My burner stand isn't high enough to get a good siphon going so the large amount of pellet and whole hops kept stopping the siphon. I'm going to get some concrete blocks to elevate my rig a little for next time. I'm also looking into installing a ball valve, pickup tube, and thermometer. Ten gallons took me about 4 and a half hours from dragging out my gear to putting everything away, but the siphoning and racking to primary took a half hour!
April 3, 2009 - Post By: richt
Is It Spring Yet?
Since I haven't posted in awhile, here's a quick rundown of what I've been up to beerwise.- Kicked the Oatmeal Stout keg. Overall this was a nice beer. Good roasted barley character, a little toasted flavor, and a nice and smooth mouthfeel. May have been just a bit too bitter, so I'll probably use a little less at 60 minutes. While I enjoyed drinking this beer, I got a little sick of it by the end. Not a real session beer.
- Brewed the Double IPA with almost 2 ounces of Warrior at 60 to bitter. I split 2 ounces of Simcoe and 2 ounces of Summit into three piles and added each pile at 15, 5, and flameout. I was going to use the yeast cake from the VSS Imperial Blend but the starter beer I brewed and attempted to FWH for the first time, did it wrong, and mistreated the yeast somehow so it tasted too estery. I just pitched 2 packets of US05 instead. This beer did finish too sweet, so next time I'll use more sugar instead of malt to get it dryer, but it tasted drier than it measured. At 10% ABV and 125 IBUs, this beer is really deceiving and dangerously drinkable.
- Brewed a Patersbier with Wyeast 3787 and all Saaz hops. I'm hoping to use the yeast cake for a tripel in a month or so.
- I have converted my keg into a kettle, but I still need to clean it up and do a test run. I'm not real confident in how fast I'll be able to boil with my current burner. I think that I'll also probably need to build a new immersion chiller for 10 gallon batches, which reminds me that I need to do that soon since I'm having a Big Brew Day club event and was going to split a batch of Saison with a friend. I'm thinking about giving the Brew in a Bag all grain method a try this summer once I finish the upgrade.
- Last Saturday the RAZE club toured the Mantorville Brewing Company. The owner, Tod Fyten, started as a homebrewer and gave us the full on beer geek version of the tour. It was awesome! He really had a lot of insight into the history of beer and brewing, especially in Minnesota, and also gave us a detailed talk of his brewing process. We finished it off with some samples of his Maple Ale, Blonde, and Smoked Porter. I got a growler of the Smoked Porter and had no problem finishing it.
February 5, 2009 - Post By: richt
Time to try a bitter
I just got done making a starter for Sunday's brewday. I'll be brewing Jamil's Best Bitter (minus the aromatic malt since I'm mini-mashing with Maris Otter) and smoking a pork shoulder at the same time. Should be a good time. It's been a long time since I made a starter! I've been using US05 so much that I actually had to look back at an old blog post that I made about starters and check the Mr. Malty site. I ended up using Wyeast 1028 London Ale instead of the 1968 ESB that Jamil recommends but the LHBS doesn't stock it. Oh well.RAZE meeting tomorrow night, woot! Lots to talk about too, upcoming brewery tours of Mantorville Brewing Company and Pearl Street Brewery, plan for the hopgrowing season, and figure out what we're doing for Big Brew Day. We've got more members trickling in, which is awesome since it's always good to talk to other brewers and beer geeks like myself. I must admit I'm also stoked that I'll be able to drink Hopslam on tap! I'm still trying to decide if it's worth dropping 16 bucks on a 6er, when I can just about brew 5 gallons for that, not a fine DIPA of course, but still, 5 gallons.
The Hopsicle IPA is tasting mighty fine right now. I just tapped the Oatmeal Stout and am drinking my first pint right now. It's a little young, but it's got a nice roasty chocolatey flavor with a little hop bitterness in the mix too. I'm happy! Here's the Hopsicle recipe (partial mash)if you're interested:
- 3 lbs Golden Promise
- .5 lbs C60
- .25 lbs C120
- .25 Vienna
- 6 lbs Briess Pilsen DME
- 1 oz Nugget @ 60 minutes
- 1 oz Simcoe @ 15
- 1 oz Centennial @ 10
- 1 oz homegrown Cascade/Centennial/Zeus mix at 5
- 1 oz homegrown mix at flameout
- 1 oz Columbus dry hop
1.070 OG, 1.017 FG (a little high, but the bitterness balances it out), 77 IBUS, 6.9 ABV.
January 13, 2009 - Post By: richt
A Trip to the Brewshop
It was a busy brew related weekend for me! I hosted the RAZE brewclub meeting at my house Friday night. Not everybody could make it but I sampled some awesome beers, saw a cool oxygen free beer transfer gadget, and talked a lot about brewing. On Saturday I took the fam to the zoo and then made a stop at Midwest Supplies. I grabbed a bunch of Warrior hops, some Summit and Strisselspalt hops, a bunch of o-rings, a good supply of US-05, a smackpack of one of the new Wyeast VSS releases (Imperial Ale - here), and a new book: Farmhouse Ales. Today was brewday, so I did a partial mash Oatmeal Stout. This was my first time brewing an Oatmeal Stout so I used Jamil's recipe from Brewing Classic Styles, although I did make a few minor changes based on what I had on hand. I also managed to rack my Hopsicle IPA into secondary on top of an ounce of Columbus hops. Now I'm relaxing with a homebrew.I'm thinking I'm going to brew an Imperial IPA again pretty soon. I've got pounds of hops in the freezer and a fresh smackpack of the Imperial Ale yeast, so it is officially on deck. Rather than screw with a starter though, I think I'm just going to brew an APA with it and save the cake. I'll probably brew that next weekend and try out my new Warrior hops and possibly first wort hopping too. Three weeks after that I should be ready to brew the Imperial and have it ready for Kristen's birthday.
So for Christmas I got a 365 days of beer page-a-day calendar. Saturday's beer was Saison Dupont. Reading that got me fired up about saisons like Ommegang's Hennepin so I adopted another resolution for the year: learn how to brew a good saison. So far it's a pretty good read. I'm thinking about brewing my first one after the APA. EDIT: Monday I picked up a 4 pack of Ommegang Hennepin, a 750 of Saison Dupont, and Surly Cynic for research.
In other brew news, Kristen actually suggested that I get a propane hot water on demand system and build a small shed of some sort with a sink and stuff so that I can have everything I need on the brew patio and not have to make so many trips in an out of the house and back and forth to the garage/basement. I love that woman. I'm thinking an inline filter might be a good idea too. Any suggestions on what I should do?
January 4, 2009 - Post By: richt
Brew Year's Resolutions
It's hard to believe it's almost been a month since I last blogged! Despite the craziness of the holiday season, I did manage to keep brewing. Since my last post, I blew the Ahtnanum APA keg, blew the Red Hook Harvest clone experiment keg, brewed my version of Jamil's Evil Twin red ale, brewed Jamil's Irish red ale, brewed an IPA, and put off brewing an Oatmeal Stout so that I can recuperate today. Details about my brews:- Ahtanum APA: Bittered this with some Nugget then added 3 ounces late in the boil (1 oz each at 10, 5, and flameout). I used the same malt profile as usual for my APA (6 pounds Pilsen DME, .5 lb Caramel 60, .5 lb Carapils), but this beer was pretty blah. The Nugget did provide a nice clean bitterness, but the Ahtanum didn't provide nearly the citrus that I expected from reading the description. It tasted and smelled more flowery to me. It was still a good beer, but didn't really do it for me. I think I'll stick to Cascade and Centennial for my APA.
- Red Hook clone: This beer turned out to not be real close to the original because there was too much roasted barley. However, I really liked this beer alot. It wasn't really a session beer, but it was a great fall or winter brew. This was probably one of the most balanced beers I've brewed so far. There was a nice roasty and smoky backbone to this one with just enough hops to balance it out. Style wise, I'm not really sure what this would be. I read the BJCP descriptions and it is really a toss up between a brown, red , or porter. I'm having a really tough time deciding whether I should brew this again next fall the same way or decrease the roasted barley presence a little.
- Jamil's Evil Twin: I am not calling this Jamil's Evil Twin anymore since it wasn't hopbursted and I didn't use the same hops, so it is more inspired by his recipe. I am calling it Big Red because that's what it is, a big, malty, hoppy red ale. I used .25 oz of Nugget to bitter and then an ounce of Simcoe and Amarillo at 10 minutes and then again at flameout. This beer is GOOD! Nice deep red in color, awesome hop flavor and aroma, and good malt flavor to back it up without being too sweet. When I brewed this I was drinking and inspired by Widmer Brrr and Lagunitas Imperial Red, and I think I hit the mark on this one. It will be brewed again.
- Hopsicle IPA: Named this one because I froze brewing it. This was a minimash with 3 pounds of Golden Promise just to see what would happen. Bittered this one with Nugget, then threw in some Simcoe, Centennial, and then the last of my hop harvest (a mix of Cascade, Centennial, and Zeus). This one will probably get dryhopped with Columbus.
- Jamil's Irish Red: Kegging this one today, haven't tried it yet. I've got high hopes though!
After increasing my brewing skills and volumes over the last year, now I'm looking forward to 2009. Here are my brew year's resolutions in no particular order:
- Brew more. I would like to be able to not buy beer anymore except for when I'm working on a recipe. I brewed over 100 gallons in 2008, hoping to do even more in 2009.
- Move up to 10 gallon batches. I'm having a tough time keeping the kegerator full and I think this will help, especially now that I am brewing tried and true recipes that I know I will like.
- Upgrade the kegerator. Hopefully by the summer I will have a chest freezer with a collar that will be capable of dispensing 4-6 different beers. Variety is good, but this might also make it easier for me to keep the kegerator full without brewing every other weekend.
Any of my huge volume of loyal readers out there have any resolutions, beer related or not?
December 6, 2008 - Post By: richt
Happy Repeal Day!
Hopefully you're all drinking right now, or did sometime today. December 5, 2008 is the 75th anniversary of the ratification of the 21st Amendment to the Constitution, thus ending our nation's stupid experiment called Prohibition. So drink up!To celebrate, I had a Widmer Brrr, a Sierra Nevada Celebration Ale, a 21st Amendment watermelon wheat (how appropriate), and my own Wee Heavy. I also broke down all of my kegs and replaced the o-rings, then kegged my RedHook Late Harvest clone and my Ahtanum APA. All in all, a good day.
Sunday I'll be brewing Jamil's Evil Twin with a few modifications. I'll be partial mashing the specialty grains and adding an extra pound of Munich, then I'm subbing Simcoe and Amarillo for the late hops. I'm excited! The recipe is here: http://www.mrmalty.com/late_hopping.htm.
Cheers!
November 17, 2008 - Post By: richt
My First Partial Mash
I broke in the mini mashtun today with the Late Harvest Autumn Ale clone I've been working on. The recipe is in the previous post. I used 5 quarts of water and 4 pounds of grain. I think I could do 5 pounds of grain but I would definitely have to do a thicker mash to fit it in there, probably 1 quart/pound instead of 1.25. I did make a few mistakes though. First, my strike water was a little too warm - about 168 after I added it to the mash, so I had to stir for a while to bring it down to 158, which I now realize is still probably too warm. Next time I'll just heat the strike water to 160. My next mistake was getting worried about the mash being too hot. About halfway through the mash I opened up the cooler and stirred some more to drop the temp. I ended up losing more heat after this because after an hour it had dropped to 148. As a result of these, the OG was 1.050, but I was shooting for 1.059. Oh well, lessons learned. Hopefully it's still drinkable. If I get motivated I'll post some pictures.The "pilsner" has dropped to 1.012 and is golden and tasty. I put it in the garage to cold crash it before I keg tomorrow or the next day. The Centennial IPA is tasting pretty good too, but it's well on it's way to being kicked. I am having a really rough time keeping 2 beers on tap! Any of you have that problem? I'm going to have to crank out a quick APA next weekend to rebuild the stash, I'm thinking Nugget to bitter and Ahtanum for flavor and aroma to get a feel for what it can do.