Sunday, May 15, 2011

Red Hook Porter clone

Okay, I was wrong. More about the Porter.

While brewing the Pinstripe Red Ale clone this past Saturday, I performed a little experiment with a bottle of the first batch of Porter we brewed. I poured the twelve ounce bottle into a glass, and added 2 ounces of room temp coffee (we make it pretty strong). The result was absolutely delicious. It reminded me a little of the Out of Sight Stout that Avery was serving a few months ago. In that case, Avery mixed their regular Out of Bounds Stout with cold-press coffee from a local roaster (the name escapes me). My little coffee porter experiment wasn't as good, but you can bet my next batch of porter will have coffee added.

Ska's Pinstripe Red Clone

I should probably snap some photos of the brewing process.

After a fast and furious start to home brewing, we took a break for about a month. Break time over. Last weekend we brewed another back of Red Hook Porter clone. The first batch of Porter was probably the best so far, so I have high hopes for this one. It ended up at the same original gravity as the first one, which is a good sign. The only thing we changed was the addition of a tiny (about 1 oz) amount of chocolate malt for the mini mash.

But enough about porter... this is about yesterday's near-disastrous attempt at brewing a clone of Ska's Pinstripe Red. This is the recipe of the month at The Brew Hut, so the ingredients were 10% off. However, there sure are a lot of ingredients, so it was still a relatively expensive batch. Recipe below.

The process started out just fine. Since the 30qt brew kettle doesn't fit well on the electric cooktop range, we brewed outside using the burner from a turkey fryer, which was borrowed from Chris's dad (thanks, Leo!). This has worked well for the previous five batches, all boiled during the severe Denver Drought.

Drought time came to an end last week when the sky opened up for days at a time. I thought we would have a break from the rain on Saturday, so I fired up the kettle and began the mini-mash. Just as we finished the mini-mash and added the LME, rain drops started falling. We turned off the heat and covered everything with umbrellas as we went inside to check the radar. It looked like it was only going to rain for awhile, so we figured we could pick it up later. A couple of hours passed and it looked like it was only going to get worse, so I made the call: bring the kettle inside and do the boil on the stove.

The kettle had been sitting outside in 40-degree temps for about 2 hours, and the wort had only cooled 20 or 30 degrees. It took awhile to get boiling on the stove, but the rest of the boil went fine. It smelled pretty good when it went into the fermenter, thanks to the flameout addition of Cascade and Tettnanger hops. As it turns out, I didn't read the recipe correctly, so instead of 1.5 oz of Liberty as First Wort Hops, I ended up just adding 3 oz in at the start of the boil.

Here's the recipe:

Ska's Pinstripe Red Ale Clone:

7 lbs Light Liquid Malt Extract
Grain:
- 12 oz Carapils
- 8 oz Crystal 80
- 4 oz Red Wheat Malt
- 2 oz Crystal 120

Hop schedule:
1.5 oz Liberty (First Wort Hop)
1.5 oz Liberty (60 min)
1 oz Cascade (0 min)
1 oz Tettnanger (0 min)

Yeast:
California Ale V, WLP051
American Ale II, WYeast 1272
Safale US-05

Note: First Wort Hop means adding directly after the mash, before brining the wort to a boil (see more at BeerSmith). The "0 min" hop additions are apparently also known as "flame-out" additions. Add the hops at the end of the 60 minute boil and leave them in there for 10-15 minutes as you cool the wort. These are two things I learned yesterday.