I started thinking about Teach a Friend to Brew Day when I realized it would be on the same day as our neighborhood fall festival. That's when I thought. How cool would it be to demonstrate brewing at the party. I was a bit reluctant, but, my wife encouraged me. That's all it took. Out went the neighborhood newsletter announcing the spectacle. Soon it was showtime and I spent most of the day Saturday getting my proverbial sh#t together. Ten gallons of water, check, 3 gallons of one step, check, liquid malt extract check, 30 lbs of ice, check, lots of books and mags, check...the rest of the mobile brewing setup, check. Did I mention that this demonstration is not at my house?!
In retrospect I could have been a little better organized with the Teach a Friend to Brew Day literature and even cards for my own website, but, I made up for it with lots of answers and explanations, besides they know where I live. I also found a couple other homebrewers in the neighborhood. Not to mention Bryan from The Brew Lounge. Thanks for taking some pictures. Somehow I forgot to do that too. Yes, that's a limited edition TBL T-Shirt I'm sporting.
Some popular questions and statements;
- How long does it take?
- What are you doing right now?
- So we can't drink it today?
- Do you sell your beer?
- Will you give us a chance to taste the beer?
- How do you increase the alcohol?
- What kind of beer are you making?
- How much does it cost?
About 10 to 20 people asked questions and helped. The process took about 4 hours to brew a 5 gal. extract batch of some kind of high abv stout. The process went like this.
- go buy yeast because you can't find yours
- spend hours gathering and loading everything you need for mobile brewery
- heat 6 gallons of water I brought in soda kegs
- add steeping grains
- steep for 30 min
- bring to boil
- kill flame
- add malt extract
- boil
- turn down the heat
- add some hops
- add some more hops periodically
- chill with 30 lbs of ice
- panic and ask to borrow garden hose
- clean chiller with one step
- chill beer with chiller to 75 degrees F
- put pot on table (after borrowing table)
- siphon beer into carboy
- add dry yeast
- aerate by shaking carboy on grass
- add stopper and airlock
- clean up
- enjoy homemade mead
- go to awesome homebrew halloween party
3 comments:
I'm a tad skeptical about how this garden hose was used....but, maybe you could dub this one the Garden Hose Stout
Let your mind rest at ease. It was hooked to a chiller. Or was it?
I'll keep that in mind. Garden Hose Stout.
If you use it, I'll be sure to give proper credit to the LanCo guy who coined it first
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