Cream Ale Gravity Test

It’s been about 1 1/2 weeks since brewing and I see that the bubbling in the airlock is very minimal so I decided to check the gravity with my hydrometer. My starting gravity was 1.053. I’m expecting to bottle at around 1.005 or so. After measuring the current gravity I know it’s not ready yet. It measures at 1.015. I’m getting close though. I will check it again in a few days to see if or how much it has gone down.

Admiring the color of the cream ale

Admiring the color of the cream ale

Hydrometer test jar full of my cream ale

Hydrometer test jar full of my cream ale

Nice full hydrometer test jar. It's a pretty site.

Nice full hydrometer test jar. It's a pretty site.

And I have my reading. Not quite ready yet. 1.015

And I have my reading. Not quite ready yet. 1.015

Harry Potter, Camera and Krispy Kreme

It’s been over a month now and I miss my boy. One week until I fly over to fetch him, which means it’s only one week before Holly gets to go watch the new Harry Potter flick. And don’t think I’m not going to watch it either. After Holly brings me to the airport, she is going to go watch Harry Potter with Leif. When I get back with Gavin, we are all going to see it. That way Holly can be sure not to have missed anything, and I’ll get to watch it as well.

So while we were over on Oahu visiting the visiting relatives and celebrating birthdays and fathers, Holly’s camera went kaput. I guess it just couldn’t handle all the tiki torch fun, excitable kids, tremendous fun, breathtaking action, beautiful baby, sun stricken beaches, and of course the fine grit sand that filled all it’s pukas.

We decided that we had to buy a new camera and that we should get a good one. Most of our cameras have not quite been up to standard. So while at Costco last Saturday we made the mistake of looking at their cameras. It didn’t take long for us to drip drool all over the point-and-shoot cameras as we looked at the SLR cameras. Oh, we were in heaven. No doubt that is what we want. But oh, the price. So we lust. We lust for the Canon EOS Rebel XSi.

In other news, I turn 30 in just 3 weeks. I suppose it’s a bit cliché, but I’ve decided to jump into an exercise/diet program I’ve been seeing on the telly for years now. I was never a super buff guy, but I’ve always been in shape, so for my 30th birthday, I’d like to change that a little and increase the buffness. 🙂 I’ve also not been completely satisfied of the direction my eating habits have gone. I still don’t eat McDonalds or Burger King, but eating at Koho’s and Krispy Kreme every weekend will have an effect as well. So away I go.

Making A Yeast Starter

Preparation – To insure a quick start to your fermentation and help protect against contamination and infection, it is a good idea to make a yeast starter. Some say it’s especially effective if you’re using a freeze dried yeast, harvested a culture from a previous brew, using bigger commercially available yeasts such as White Labs or W’yeast, or brewing a particularly large batch of beer. If you ask me, I think that covers most scenarios for the home brewer and a yeast starter should be made every time. It can only help. That is assuming that you are careful not to contaminate your starter, which I’m sure you will be.

You’ll want to make your yeast starter at least a day before brewing. This will allow enough time for the yeast to feed upon the lovely sugars and build up a good layer of ever hungry yeast on the bottom of your container. When you are ready to make your yeast starter, gather the following items:

  • • Plastic or Glass jug – one quart to a gallon is fine. Glass better, but I’m using a well cleaned and sanitized plastic veggy oil container.
  • • Dry Malt Extract – light/dark doesn’t matter. There won’t be enough to affect your final brew.
  • • Small sauce pan and lid
  • • Airlock
  • • Rubber Stopper that fits your glass jug
  • • Sanitizer – I use concentrated iodine
  • • Small Thermometer
  • • Yeast (if using liquid yeast, you should make sure you remove it from the fridge and have it at room temperature)
  • • Funnel (optional) – I use one, although it does add another possibility for contamination
  • • Vodka or boiled then cooled water


Equipment

Sanitize – Making a yeast starter is just like brewing a regular batch of beer, only you’re not interested in anything but providing lots of sugar for the yeast to feed on. Which is why we’re only useing some dried malt extract, water and yeast. Now before you begin, remember, everything that touches the wort after the boil must be sanitized. This includes the jug, airlock, cap, rubber stopper, thermometer, and funnel if you are using one. Sanitize these with a commercial sanitizer. I use a concentrated iodine solution. The pan and lit don’t necessarily need to be sanitized since the boil will do the job, but I do it just to be extra safe.

* As a note, I often put some sanitizing solution on a place as a place to put things like the thermometer and mixing spoon that are used more than once.


Sanitize

Sanitize jug

if you get bored waiting, you can peel labels off of your jug.

Wort – Now that all your equipment is sanitized, you’ll need to make the wort. Put half a cup of dried malt extract into your sauce pan then add about a cup of water. Boil for a couple of minutes to make sure it’s sanitized keeping the lid on as much as possible to prevent too much evaporation. Watch out for boil overs!


Dried Malt Extract (DME)

Mix DME with water

Boil wort

If you stand and watch it, the 20 minutes goes faster.

Cool – After about 20 minutes you’re going to have to cool the wort to your target temperature. Be sure to keep the lid on your sauce pan except for checking the temperature to keep out contaminants. On the same note, also make sure your thermometer is sanitized before putting it in the wort. To determine the correct temperature for pitching the yeast, you can do one of two things: check the recommendations on the yeast package or shoot for 60 – 72 degrees Fahrenheit for ales and 46 – 55 degrees Fahrenheit for lagers. Either way, you should make sure you pitch the yeast at the same temperature your beer will be fermenting at. So if you plan on placing your fermenters in your basement where it’s 65?, then that is the temp you should pitch your starter yeast at.


Cool wort

Contain – When the wort is cooled to the optimum temperature and the jug is sanitized, carefully pour the wort in. If you plan on using, and have sanitized one, this would be the time to use that funnel.

Fill

Yeast – You may now add the yeast.

Add Yeast

Airlock – Put the airlock in the stopper and the stopper in the jug. Carefully agitate the wort so it will be properly aerated. You can do this by gently shaking the jug. Don’t be afraid to swish it around a bit. Just don’t get carried away.

Airlock

Protect – Fill the airlock halfway with vodka – protects against contamination – or boiled then cooled water.

Protect

Cap – Cap the airlock. Place and keep the jug in a dark place that matches the yeast’s temperature requirements.

Cap the airlock

Ferment – In a day or less you should start to see active fermentation. The airlock will bubble and if you’re as excited about beer as I am, you’ll stare at the jug just to watch it bubble. Don’t get worried if you don’t see high krausen, the billowing clumps of foam that form during regular fermentation with a full batch. The important thing is that after a bit of that bubbling you will start to see some deposit of yeast at the bottom of the jug. This deposit will keep increasing in size. By brew day you should have a thick layer of eager yeast, ready to give your beer a head start. When pitching into you’re full batch, make sure to get all of that yeast into your wort.

Using a yeast starter like this will produce fermentation in less than a day, sometimes even hours after adding. Good luck and happy brewing!

Maui Earthquake

So Holly and I were lying around the living room relaxing and minding our own business when all the windows jolted and rattled and made us think that something ran into our house. Maybe an angry neighbor, or a drunk angry neighbor, or maybe a huge gust of wind or something. Although it would have had to been an extremely super sized gust of wind. We checked on the baby and listened for the sounds of neighbors or any other activity outside and heard nothing. It occurred to Holly a few minutes later that it might have been an earthquake, and with a few google searches later we landed on this page which told us that there was a 3.4 magnitude earthquake 15 miles from here. That would explain it. This is the second earthquake I’ve felt now that actually shook the house. The first one was before I moved to California, living in the pink house, and thought that the entire section of hose, which was up on stilts, was going to collapse with me in it. But it didn’t.