วันเสาร์ที่ 21 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Some Basic Vocabulary For Brewing Beer

Now that I've brewed my first lager, I'm venturing into the land of all-grain brewing. There is a lot a vocabulary between the grain and the beer that I have gotten confused a number of times. I thought that it would be advantageous for me to put my ducks and a row and outline out the transformation of grain and words to beer. Then I figured I'd write about it so here we go. Please spoton me if I get anyone incorrect.

All grain brewing is brewing from scratch. To brew from scratch with as puny as potential you need water, malt, and hops. Obviously we know what water is, good ol' H20. Malt is the grain (barley or what-have you) used to yield beer. And hops is the plant (Fun Fact: close on the plant house tree to marijuana) used to balance the sweetness of malt with bitter. There are many distinct variety of hops, grains, and distinct flavors of water, which is not going to be covered here. This is about the basics.

Case Rack

The malt (grain) starts as a shell and runs straight through a machine. The mill. The mill cracks the grain to open it up so that the flavors (again keeping it simple) can be brought out. Once the malt is cracked, it is now called grist. So the Mill This turns the grain into the grist.

Now that you have the grist you have to get all the good stuff out. You do this by mashing. To mash, you need to dump your grist into a mash/lauter tun. For your basic homebrewer (such as myself) that can be as simple as a jobsite cooler (ex. Your accepted gatorade sports cooler, preferably 10 gallon), with a false bottom.

A false bottom in this case is a screen in bottom of the cooler that you can drain the water straight through the grist.

Now you have your grist in your mash/lauter tun. Mashing is nothing but steeping the grist in hot water. This extracts all the sugars.

After about an hour of mashing, you need to lauter your mash. Lautering your mash is opportunity up the spigot at the bottom of your mash/lauter tun, and letting your wort (your mash has now turned into wort, nothing more) drain out.

Now you sparge your mash. This gets extra wort out by rinsing the mash with water.

Now you have wort (pronounced wert). Which you may have already heard of before if you've at least read about homebrewing. If you are using specialty grains this is where you steep your grains. Just like you would tea, except with a larger bag of grain.

Now you begin the boiling (be just not to boil over), and you add your hops at distinct intervals. Once the boil is done you chill the wort, add it to your fermenter, and pitch your yeast.

Pitching your yeast involves no wind-up, no projectiles. Just dump your bag of yeast in.

Almost done here folks. If you're brewing a lager the next part is lagering. If not, but you want to refine the flavors of your beer a puny more, or let more sediment fall out, it's the secondary fermentation. So whether you lager, or secondary ferment, you rack your fermented beer to someone else container, maybe a carboy.

Racking involves using a racking cane which pulls the wort off the sludge that has accumulated on the bottom of your fermenting vessel. You want to leave that sludge behind. A carboy is a a funny shaped bottle, much like the bottle at your office water cooler.

Home stretch now. Now you health your beer. Conditioning involves adding a puny extra sugar so when you seal your beer it ferments just a puny bit more and carbonates it.

That's It! Keg it, bottle it. Wait for it... Wait for it... Drink it!!

Like I said earlier, please let me know of any corrections and I will modernize this post. I owe a lot of facts from my own caress and from John Palmers "How to Brew." Good book, go and get it.

Some Basic Vocabulary For Brewing Beer

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