Buy local or brew your own. Anybody can brew beer. Everybody should brew beer. Do it your way.
Welcome, please leave a comment if you have questions or email me adam@nonconfermist.com
12.26.2007
Fresh yeast is not going to waste here...
So what is it called? Who knows? Yule Porter?
Cheers!
12.23.2007
Two batches of 1620 Deux English Style Ale (force carbonation vs. cask conditioning)
I wonder if I'll need to use finings on either? Gelatin perhaps?
Cheers!
12.21.2007
Via Bryan @ The Brew Lounge - Joe Sixpack | Norway | Winter Solstice
Joe Sixpack ran a great story today about Hans Magne Olsen of Norway, the Winter Solstice tradition of brewing juløl and coping with the 24 hours of darkness.
Here in the Northern hemisphere Winter Solstice is upon us. Gradually the sun will rise higher in the sky and spring will return. Until then dream about tasting some juløl to keep you warm on these long winter nights.
Skål!
12.19.2007
Winter Solstice is around the corner!

Around this time of year people all over the world celebrate. Dozens or more traditions are recognized this time of year for one reason or another. Here's to some of the longest darkest days/nights of the year. May you spend it in good company :-)
Cheers!
12.18.2007
A really real beer blog post!
Ok, so I promised to stay on my tangent about homebrew beer blogging. Now I will commence with the introspective stream of conscience. Hold on to your mouse!
What am I doing here in the brewing blogosphere?
Making homebrewing more accessible? Expressing myself? Virtually and sometimes physically meeting new people? Bringing together some good home brew bloggers? Attempting to justify my hobby by writing interesting little notes about it on the Web? Keeping track of some of my experiences in brewing so I can reflect on them? Trying to improve my brewing? Drinking beer?
Yep, that is what I'm doin' here? What are you doin' here in the beer blogosphere?
later
A real beer blog post.
What am I doing with this site? What the heck kinda site is this anyway? Well it is a blog. What's that? Here is the current entry from Wikipedia...
Well "blog" may well be the more accepted portmanteau (new word for me) of web log, but, I think Grove's Beer Log site name suggests alternate roots for this portmanteau, "beer log" or perhaps "brew log". Fits this corner of the blogosphere much better don't you think? (Or is that beerosphere?)A blog (a portmanteau of web log) is a website where entries are written in chronological order and commonly displayed in reverse chronological order. "Blog" can also be used as a verb, meaning to maintain or add content to a blog.
Many blogs provide commentary or news on a particular subject; others function as more personal online diaries. A typical blog combines text, images, and links to other blogs, web pages, and other media related to its topic. The ability for readers to leave comments in an interactive format is an important part of many blogs. Most blogs are primarily textual, although some focus on art (artlog), photographs (photoblog), sketchblog, videos (vlog), music (MP3 blog), audio (podcasting) and are part of a wider network of social media. Micro-blogging is another type of blogging which consists of blogs with very short posts.
Whew! Still not done with the larger tangent here. In the next post I'll write a bit more about what I'm doing on this site or I'll at least make it up as I go along ;-)
BEER RELATED CONTENT!
Oh yeah...the two carboys of 1620 Just in Time Ale are still waiting to be kegged. Actually these were a bit different, but, still based on that recipe. Perhaps we'll call it 1620 Second Time Around ale.
Prost!
12.17.2007
Jeremy's Homebrew Batch 001
Have a homebrew of course. Jeremy gave me a couple bottles when we visited the other day. I think this is a kit brew from Best Brew called a Dortmunder Style brew. When Jeremy first brewed it I thought. Not too bad for a first brew. I have to say that the bottle conditioning really helped this out. I'm enjoying the heck out of this one right now! Thanks Jeremy.
Anyway, how does it taste? Fruity esters in the nose. There's some hops in the nose too. Kinda grapefruity in a way. The taste is pretty much the same. Enough hops to be prominent and enough malt to balance out the hops. This isn't a sweet beer, but, definately full bodied. I could drink many of these.
Prost!
12.14.2007
Brew Dad just moved up.
Ok, so I'm not sure how I manage to miss Brewdad on my clickabout and movin' up posts. {shrug} Let it be known it wasn't on purpose. Brewdad is just the kinda site I like. He shares his experience and tries to help new home brewers get started. He's not too cool for us. Thanks Brewdad for a great blog!
Prost!
12.12.2007
A clickabout, what's happening at my favorite homebrew blogs.
Ted's Homebrew Journal
Something to look forward to in January. Ted and his brother are brewing some herbal beer. For healing or as an alternative to hops? Either way its the kinda things that homebrewers are in a unique position to experiment with. While we are waiting you can read a flyer posted today about the up and coming Half Acre Brewing's draught release party. Always interested to see the substantial posts coming from this blog.
CNYBrew.com
Travis over at CNYbrew has been wrangling a big yeti clone and getting creamed by a voracious yeast/beast. All this after wrenching on a second beer fridge/kegerator. ;-)
Foureyed (Beer) Geek
Eli is back in the saddle after a long hiatus. He's been traveling across the state to Philly and enjoying his spoils from The Sly Fox. He's home brewing too! I'm not sure if the trip inspired him to brew or the brew inspired the trip, but, I'm happy to see him writing again. Today he's asking for some help pairing a beer with venison. Drop over and help him out if you can.
Grove's Beer Log
Grove, The Norwegian ;-), gives us some good quality posts every now and then about brewing
equipment, his brews and their recipes. I want this guy's setup!
Michigan Beer Buzz
Sarah, Kevin and Rob at Michigan Beer Buzz wax nostalgic about The Beer Store and ponder the hops shortage. They seem to be new to the blogging world and according the them their blog will be "the best blog ever". I wonder if they've seen Beer Bits 2!? New straight up regional beer blog in Michigan.
Nate's Beer & Brewing Blog
Nate seems to be splitting time being a homebrewer, club organizer, blogger and plain old evangelist for good beer in Western PA. Hey Nate thanks for turning me on to Voodoo. Just bought some for some friends as a gift.
Rooftop Brew
Scott and Andy over at Rooftop Brew have been at this blogging thing for five years! I really need to check out their tutorials, recipes and tools. I'm so used to reading the blog I overlooked them.
Chibebräu: the Chibes' online homebrew log
Russ and Leah run the blog over at Chibebräu. Russ is blogging about a trip to Germany. To be honest I haven't read all of his posts, but, I'm gonna. I think I'm afraid I'll wanna go to Germany. I'm so jealous!
The Daily Ikura
Brian over at The Daily Ikura posts every now and then about his all grain homebrewing adventures. Recipes, equipment and unabashed home brew stories documented for all the world to see.
Monday Night Brewing
Today they are the masters of gravity. What can I say? Week after week they have something to say about the long road to their dream of commercial brewing, the motley crew that surrounds them (ok, so I don't know if they really are motley) or interviews with breweries.
Mornin' governor!
Off to see what those other beer blogging blokes are up to. I'll let you know what I find during my walkabout...er clickabout. {shrug}
Cheers!
12.10.2007
Kegging & Cask Resources
Check your local homebrew store for supplies. You can also find equipment on Amazon...
Amazon: Kegerator Equipment
Alternative Brewing's Kegging Page (Cornelius Kegs)
http://www.ebrew.com/primarynews/intro_keg_system.htm
Brew Your Own's reader's question on cask conditioning your homebrew
http://byo.com/mrwizard/383.html
Cheers!
Wasted beer and new beginnings...
Umm...we had a little accident. Somehow somebody moved the recycling bucket in the garage. In the process the thingy on your beer opened up and beer was all over the garage floor. I stopped it, but, I don't know how much is left.GAAAA! Yeah, this was not good news. I checked it out when I got home. About a gallon or so of the the Old English Pumpkin Ale (OEPA) was gone. Not to mention a wonderful brewery smell permeated the garage. Oh well, it was my fault for leaving it out where things like that can happen. Won't do that anymore. You know this may have been one of the best beers I've brewed in a long time too :-(
No sense crying over spilt beer ;-) Good thing I got two more batches of English Style Ale going last Thursday using the yeast cake from the OEPA. These were based on the 1620 Just in Time Ale with home grown whole Cascade hops instead of East Kent Goldings pellets. This time I made one big high gravity seven gallon wort and split it between two carboys. Then I topped it off to approx. five gallons. Seemed to work out pretty well. One was a bit lower gravity than the other, but, who cares.
I think I'll dry hop one and leave the other. Who knows, maybe I'll try to "cask condition" some. Whatever that means to a homebrewer. Gravity pour from a cornie keg? Hmmm...any ideas out there in the beer blogoshpere?
12.06.2007
Law: Is homebrewing beer legal?
The current U.S. federal limit on homebrewing beer is 100 gal. (20 x 5 gal. batches) for a single adult, or 200 gal. (40 x 5 gal. batches) for a household with two or more adults. More info here at the American Homebrewer's Association (AHA)...
http://www.homebrewersassociation.org/pages/government-affairs/statutes
Beyond that the State governs homebrew as well. If you're interested in laws in your state that govern homebrewing, look no further. Again the American Homebrewers Association (AHA) has a great resouce where we can look up the laws for each state here...
http://www.homebrewersassociation.org/pages/government-affairs/statutes
The sites above should have all the legal info you need. If you are looking for books about home brewing...
Amazon: Home Brewing
Cheers!
12.04.2007
12.03.2007
It is time. I'm movin' some sites to the top.
These are the links I've enjoyed reading or waiting to read day after day and week after week. I think their candid tone and informative posts are what really draw me in. I want to hear about home brewers' successes and their failures. In no particular order here are the sites I've moved up...
Foureyed (Beer) GeekProst!
http://thefoureyedbeergeek.blogspot.com/
Michigan Beer Buzz
http://www.blogsmonroe.com/beer/
The Daily Ikura
http://breuni.blogspot.com/
Chibebräu: the Chibes' online homebrew log
http://chibebrau.blogspot.com/
grove's beer log
http://blog.geirove.org/
Rooftop Brew
http://www.rooftopbrew.net/
The Drunken Polack
http://www.drunkenpolack.com/
Pumpkin English Old Ale: Tasting & Gravity
So what happens when you're racking a beer from the primary and you see a nice fresh yeast cake sitting there? If you're like me you think, "I could really take advantage of that fresh yeast." So I did. I threw together a high gravity pumpkin ale using the WLP002 English Ale Yeast I used for the 1620. How did it turn out? Here is my second set of tasting
- Very clear after about 12 days in the primary
- Orange Amber
- my nose still isn't quite up to par :-(
- smells of musky (is that bad?) pumpkin & spice with grain
- Real Pumpkin', spice with some slight alcohol notes
- not sure if there is enough malt
- A bit of a spice dry nutty finish, but, not off putting
- like cracking a nut and eating it fresh from the shell
Cheers!
No luck deer hunting, but...
Cheers!
12.01.2007
Pumpkin English Old Ale Progress
The fermentation seems to be slowing down. The air lock is blurping about once a minute or so. I think I'll transfer it into the secondary soon. Since I'm using a keg as the secondary I'm not too worried about getting it done right away. When using carboys the transfer to the secondary is done while there is still some fermentation activity going on in the primary. This allows the fermenting beer to produce a protective blanket of CO2 in the secondary. This CO2 protects the beer from oxidation. My theory is that I don't have to worry about oxidation since I'll fill the headspace of the keg with CO2. The only other thing to consider is off tastes produced by autolysis of yeast cells. From what I can tell that isn't a huge concern in the short term.
Cheers!
Amazon: Kegerator Equipment
