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Cloning Commerical Beer Recipes

So you love Sierra Nevada Pale Ale or maybe Guinness Stout is more your style and want to make a Guinness Stout Clone.  Where do you begin?  It’s not as easy as throwing some ingredients together and it’s not as hard as finding the Holy Grail, it’s somewhere in between.

Having brewed many, many batches of beer and thereby getting a feel for different grains, hops, and yeast certainly helps.  But that will take some time and you might want to brew a clone of your favorite ale sooner than later.  Well having someone who fits that billing might be helpful, but not everyone has the luxury of a buddy who has brewed beer for years.  So one way to get there more quickly is by critically drinking beer.

Critically drinking beer, seriously, what does that even mean?  Well if you want to quickly gain an appreciation of the many grains and hops available to the brewer, critically drinking beer will certainly help you out.  Drinking your beer critically is simply pouring your beer into a clear glass instead of gulping it down right out of the bottle and making notes about what you see, smell, taste, and feel.  Start by buying some random six packs of commercial craft beers at the local beer store.  Buying mix and match six packs are a great way for trying a lot of different beer without buying entire six packs.  After you’ve got the beers chilling in your fridge, take one out that looks good.  Go to the brewery’s webpage, many brewers will list ingredients (grains and hops) used in the beer (they won’t give you the exact amounts, afterall they want to you buy their beer, not make it!), then taste and smell the beer carefully.  This will allow you to get to know what Amarillo hops might taste like or what roasted barley tastes like.  Trying different beers with the same ingredients is nice to see how different ingredient combinations or different proportions of ingredients might taste.

The nice thing about a clone beer recipe is it might not be exactly what you were shooting for, hell, your first couple clones might not even be close to the target, but you’ll still have a couple cases of tasty beer to enjoy.  As you brew more and drink more beer critically, you’ll get better at cloning your favorite commercial beer.

Let me know how your latest home brewed clone has turned out!

Justin @ BeerEasy.com

Beamish Irish Stout Brew Day

As promised I’d share some more details about my Beamish Irish Stout brew from Friday.  I brewed the recipe given in Brew Your Own magazine from September 2008.  The recipe looked like this, which is very close to the recipe in the magainze.

6.0 lbs Maris Otter Malt

1.75 lbs Flaked Barley

1.0 lbs Roasted Barley

1.0 lbs Rice Hulls (for easier sparge)

1.0 oz Challenger Hop Pellets 7.6% AA – 60 minutes

0.5 oz Kent Goldings Hop Pellets 5.6% AA – 60 minutes

0.5 oz Kent Goldings Hop Pellets 5.6% AA – 15 minutes

Wyeast 1084 Irish Ale Yeast Smack Pack.

The mash went well, I got 82% efficiency on my mash and mashed at 152F.  The OG of my wort was 1.043 and calculated IBUs was 40.  I oxygenated the 5.5 gallons of wort in my fermentor for 45 seconds and pitched the yeast into wort at 71F.

Here are some photos I think a lot of you may enjoy.  Next week I’ll share a few photos of the fermentation process.  But now to the brew day photos!

Justin

beamish_grains

Here is a photo of the grains before adding to the mash tun.  The white specks are barley endosperm, the whiteish flakes are the flaked barley, the dark specs is roasted barley and you can see a great deal of barley husk and rice hulls.

Here is a photo of the mash shortly after doughing-in.

This is the mash after 60 minutes. Notice how the top watery portion of the mash has become clear compared to after doughing-in.  This is one sign of complete starch to sugar conversion.

Here is my boil setup.  The collected wort with a propane tank fueling the boil.  You can also see the big pot in the background, that’s what I use to heat my water for mash and sparges.

Not that is picture is especially exciting, but I thought it was neat with the steam rising.  It is the spent grain in a trash bag.

A wonderful photo of the boil.  You can see some flecks of protein and hop in the clear portion of the wort, lots of steam and on the left is protein hot break.  Occasionally I’ll skim some of this out and dispose.

……And finally the chilled, oxygened and yeast pitched wort.  I’ve got a blow-off tube in there just in case.  I’ll leave this post here for now.  I’ll post a few pictures of the fermentation process during the week.  An early update: fermentation is going well, I have a krausen head developing about 8 hours after pitching my yeast.

Brewday: 10/24 Beamish Irish Stout

What better to do with a vacation day before a trip?  Well after getting stuff done around the house, the answer is definitely to brew!

Today I brewed up a clone recipe from the September 2008 issue of Brew Your Own magazine, this recipe is for Beamish Irish Stout (I think I said Murphy’s Stout in the video clip, but this was the one for Beamish Stout.  Too many recipes too little time I guess!).

Beamish and Guiness are similar beers, although I like Beamish a little bit more.  It as a bit of hop flavor/aroma that isn’t in Guiness.  Anyway here’s a short video clip of the rolling boil.  It smelled wonderful, if only your monitor was scratch and sniff.  I’ll post some pictures and a some more details later in the weekend.

Anyone else brewing up a batch this weekend?  Enjoy the video!