Sunday, February 14, 2010

Bottling Split-Log Porter

After kegging the Kream Ale I decided to bottle the Porter I had brewed in November and aged on oak cubes until yesterday. During the process I would regularly "check in" to see how it was progressing. Unfortunately, every time I took a sample there was a very astringent, puckering, heavy tannin, medicinal woody smell and taste. Hoping the flavors would be corrected over time I let it age longer than normal. While the flavors did mellow out, it is still off somehow. This was my first experiment at oak aging and I have a lot to lear. I enjoy barrel aged beers and wanted to replicate that. One of the thinks I recall in this process is coming to the realization that breweries most often reuse old Bourbon barrels which impart their unique qualities. My beer was lacking in that catagory so next time I decide to age a beer on oak cubes, I'm pre-soaking them in Boubon to draw out that flavor. I learned this one night while frequenting my watering hole. I struck up a conversation with a guy who happened to be a fellow home brewer. I told me he did this one time and the beer turned out alright...so it's worth a try at least.


I enjoy bottling, but the cleaning gets old quick. That is way kegging is probably quicker and easier, but after my experience last night I more comfortable sticking to bottling.
So it was an eventful evening upon the completion of kegging and botteling both beers.

I ended the night with a sense of accomplishment and excited to move on to the next series. I think I'm going to brew each one seperately so I can watch them more carefully and give them my full attention. In two weeks both the keg and bottles should be ready so consumption.

As you can see to the right I enjoy putting labels on my fermenting buckets and keg. I think it adds a nice touch (kind of like a well traveled suitcase). Oh! During bottling I found out that Pilsner Urquell and Peroni bottles do not work. They do not have a lip for the cap press to grab onto so don't save them for homebrew.

Lately, I've been reading up on some interesting beer blogs and realized that I need to perfect my craft and grow as a homebrewer (unfortunatly, as with most hobbies, that requires cash). The best beer I've brewed to date was Common Place. I'm finding that I want to brew that beer over a couple times and perfect my recipe and quality of product. Do some experiments with hopping, use a partial mash, and explore better grains to use would all be interesting to me.
I think I might interrupt my next series of brews to attempt a second batch of Common Place...we'll see.

Happy Valentine's Day and Happy Home Brewing!

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