Skip to main content

Let it Beer






Welcome back to another taste of The Art of Caesura!







I hope the week hasn’t been too hectic, and that you have a great weekend lined up!

Last time I plied you with some of my favourite beers from the west coasts of two small Islands, this week I’d like to show you my recent U-brew efforts. For the past month I’ve been brewing a craft beer from the Mangrove Jack’s line called LordFinster (a dark English bitter-style ale). I just had my bottling day a few days ago, but let me get you up to speed on what I’ve been up to in the background for about the length of time this blog has been running.


Here is my set-up. My fiancée got me a robust plastic bucket fermenter with all the fixin’s (water seal, siphons, bottle brush, bottle caps, bottle cap capper, filling wand, hydrometer, thermometer…not to mention the actual kit with the liquid malt extract (LME), dry hops and yeast). I know, she’s a keeper!





After five days of fermentation with just the LME, glucose (I couldn’t get my hands on dextrose) and yeast I added the dry hops in a hop bag (sanitised up the wazoo). This specific yeast said to ferment for a further five days, but I ended up going for almost double that because my specific gravity was still a tad too high and my seal was still bubbling away – there was much pacing in anticipation. It was at this stage that I needed to prep the bottles. 

Unfortunately, I only had 22 x 500mL bottles, and with a magnificent 23L of beer, I was going to need to use a ton of 330mL bottles (which I was a bit loathe to do). The rest of the beer making process was great craic, but prepping the bottles was not.


In Ireland we don’t have the coveted “Oxyclean,” often lauded by North American homebrewers as the easiest thing to use to clean and strip bottles. After some thorough forum searches, it seemed that peopled used “Vanish” fabric stain remover as an alternative.



After soaking for a few hours in warm water with “Vanish” some of the labels flew straight off (in fact some were gloriously floating on top of the water (I found that many of the British ales (Wychwood Brewery, and the aforementioned Crean’s were great for this) others were crazy difficult to get the old labels off (I’m looking at you, Crabbies Ginger Beer, and Kings of Tara) requiring a dough knife, wire brush and butt loads of elbow grease.

Then I let the bottles soak in cold water overnight to get rid of any “Vanish” residue before sanitising them. Then I did it all over again three more times! It was a hell of a process, but when they were done they looked damn fine.


bottle wandbottling wand, siphon

priming sugar


Bottling went really smoothly and after adding ½ a teaspoon of glucose to each 500mL bottle and just over ¼ teaspoon to each 330mL bottle to prime them for carbonation, I filled and capped them.

Apparently this beer needs to bottle condition, so I’ll leave it in a warm place for two weeks and then a cool place for a further two weeks. In a few weeks’ time I’ll have another post on the tasting! I’m looking forward to that one.


Thanks all for reading, I hope you can get behind the eclectic nature of this blog. If you would like more detail on any aspect of this home-brewing process or if you just want to talk beer, just let me know and I’ll be more than happy!


Listening: Yuppie Dracula – Smokey Bastard
Drinking: King Puck – Crafty Divils Brewing Co., Killorglin, Ireland
Reading: Slainte – The Complete Guide to Irish Craft Beer and Cider – Caroline                 Hennessy and Kristen Jensen


Next Week:

I’ve been sneakily continuing to paint the little dudes for The World of Smog these past two weeks while our focus has been on beer. I’ll show you what I’ve been up to…next time. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Full Stop - Trench Crusade

The skies shall darken, the ground shall open up and the screams of the damned shall echo through the ages. - Novae Revelationes 99:24, Trench Crusade Greetings friends of the Caesura, and welcome back to your Friday dose of The Art of Caesura! I hope you are well, and I'm sending loads of positive vibes your way, especially if you need them today (and you will after reading of the awesome Grimdark horrors ahead).   Last week we left off looking at my plans and aspirations for Hive Fleet Klendathu, and today I had planned to show you the test model that I have painted for this Starship Troopers-inspired Tyranid force. However, something cool is afoot, and it's kind of time-sensitive... That's right - there's a Kickstarter (which has now raised over 2 million dollars!) for a very Grimdark miniatures skirmish game and it is due to end on Tuesday, so I decided to reschedule things on the blog a little to draw your attention to this before you miss your chance.  I am talki...

The Full Stop - A Deep Dive into Warhammer 40k Combat Patrol

Welcome to Combat Patrol!  Whether you are a new recruit to Warhammer 40,000  or a seasoned veteran,  Combat Patrol is all about getting your forces  into action as quickly as possible. - Combat Patrol Rules - Games Workshop Welcome back to the Art of Caesura! Recent readers will see that we've been looking at our fun little Warhammer gathering, KillCon over the past few weeks. Two weeks ago I provided a narrative verion of my game of Combat Patrol of my Black Templars vs. Tristan's Tyranids where as l ast week I gave a more "gamer oriented" play-by-play of the game.  Today I want to dive deeper into this accessible and engaging game-type. I want to argue that Combat Patrol is not just for beginners. Combat Patrol in 10th Edition is Games Workshop's new smallest scale Warhammer 40k game type. But unlike in previous editions, where it just meant that both sides took 500 point armies and went at it, in this edition, Games Workshop has changed things up a litt...

"Recitation of Faith" - Terminator Chaplain Conversion - Part 1

Chaplains rouse Space Marines to war  with their litanies of faith,  and never is this spiritual fortification more vital  than amidst the blood and horror of boarding actions  and beachhead strikes. - Games Workshop Hello all! Welcome to your weekly dose of The Art of Caesura! As usual, I'm sending you lots of positive vibes, especially if you need them today. After almost half a year of Hellboy content on the blog, it's time to return to my beloved Black Templars. I have actually been working away in the background over the past few months, polishing off a few high-profile projects for my Templars. The first of which I will begin to reveal today! Today is the first part of a kit-bash that I'm pretty proud of. We're going to be looking at it in detail over the next few weeks and today we'll look at the build.  For those unfamiliar with Black Templars, they are inspired by crusading knights and are really not fans of psychic folks (the whole "burn the witch...