September 9, 2010

Notes on a brew day: Old Golden and DSB (Dawson's Special Bitter)

What's better than ten gallons of homebrew? Not much.

Ah, but what if there were some way to  achieve two different kinds of beer from one batch? Pitch two different yeasts, you say? True. But I was thinking of parti-gyle.



Floor-malted Warminster Maris Otter - which you've heard about in other posts on this blog - is in stock for the fall at Northern Brewer, and I bought what I think was the first sack we sold (I like it a lot). Add a couple days of staycation and a 1945 slurry and I was well on the way to laying in a barley wine and a bitter.


Parti-gyle brewing is an old technique of brewing successively weaker (lower-gravity) worts with the same grist. Basically it's batch-sparging but instead of blending the runnings they're kept separate. Mash and recirculate as normal, then run off to the boiler without sparging - that high-gravity wort becomes Beer Alpha. Now add more mashout-temp water and run that off into a different vessel - this is low-gravity Beer Omega. The handy parti-gyle gravity chart in The Brewer's Companion takes the guesswork out of anticipating your two divergent OGs.


My vision: a small amount of very strong, very 100% Maris Otter, golden English barley wine. Then cap the mash (another old parti-gyle technique that you can read about in Radical Brewing) with English 55L Crystal and a modicum of Pale Chocolate malt for a larger amount of a session bitter. All East Kent Goldings all the time, and NeoBritannia yeast for both.


The grist:
  •  20 lbs Warminster Maris Otter
The krauesen ... the krauesen ...
First mash:
  •   150 F for 75 minutes
    Beer Alpha: Old Golden
    • 3 oz EKG pellets @ 90"
    Yield 3.5 gallons @ 1.108

    Second "mash":
    • infuse w/ 170 F H20

    DSB in a quasi-open fermentation in a 10 gallon s/s stockpot.
    This is just after the first skimming
     Beer Omega: DSB
    • 1 lb Simpson's Medium Crystal
    • 1 oz Fawcett Pale Chocolate
    • 0.5 lbs Blonde candi sugar
    • 1.5 oz EKG @ 60"
    • 0.5 oz EKG @ 15"
    • 1 oz EKG @ shutdown
    Yield 6 gallons @ 1.040

    DSB fermented quasi-open in a stainless stockpot for 3 days before hitting a racking gravity of 1.014. Warminster MO + NeoBritannia = bready. Overlaid with a nice Goldings hop punch ... this one will be tasty. Skimmed the yeast and saved it for the next batch - a brown ale for fall.

    As of Day 4, Old Golden still has a solid 8" of foam on the top and a fairly active airlock. NeoBritannia's nominal abv tolerance is 10%; in a few days we'll see if it can't be coaxed higher.

    3 comments:

    1. Once it's aged, we should have a MD “Old Golden” vs. KE “Scottish Too Many Schilling” (Basically all Warminster as well) throw down. Nobody would get anything done that day.

      KE

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    2. I've been meaning to try a parti-gyle brew with some friends. Seems like a great brew day. Maybe I could do like an Imperial IPA, and a pale...

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    3. I've always wanted to do a Belgian parti-gyle where the small beer got some wheat added and was turned into a lambic. Probably won't get around to it this year, though.

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