Wednesday 29 January 2014

GIFT : Ben's Adventures in Wine Making (paperback)

Got a new book on booze!!! Cool, a lovely gift from my good lady Jane. I had not heard of this one and it wasn't even on my Amazon Wish List.


Book Description

10 Oct 2011
Ben s Adventures in Wine Making is a home brewing book with a difference. It is a tale of one man s attempts to create delicious and interesting wine from unlikely ingredients. Ben Hardy takes us on a journey, in diary form, from picking his raw materials to drinking the final product. From the superb blackberry to the undrinkable potato wine, and thirty-one flavours between, Ben both amuses and informs in his efforts to produce the nectar of the gods. He is refreshingly honest about what does and does not work, and carefully records the triumphs, the disasters, and his long-suffering friends and family s reactions


I have only read the first few chapters, and it's very good. It is written a little like a diary, with how each wine is made along with tasting notes on each wine, even if the results where bad. The Amazon description above seems to cover the content of the book, so I won't go into it to deep. But I would happily recommend it.

GIFT : Ben's Adventures in Wine Making (paperback)

Got a new book on booze!!! Cool, a lovely gift from my good lady Jane. I had not heard of this one and it wasn't even on my Amazon Wish List.


Book Description

10 Oct 2011
Ben s Adventures in Wine Making is a home brewing book with a difference. It is a tale of one man s attempts to create delicious and interesting wine from unlikely ingredients. Ben Hardy takes us on a journey, in diary form, from picking his raw materials to drinking the final product. From the superb blackberry to the undrinkable potato wine, and thirty-one flavours between, Ben both amuses and informs in his efforts to produce the nectar of the gods. He is refreshingly honest about what does and does not work, and carefully records the triumphs, the disasters, and his long-suffering friends and family s reactions


I have only read the first few chapters, and it's very good. It is written a little like a diary, with how each wine is made along with tasting notes on each wine, even if the results where bad. The Amazon description above seems to cover the content of the book, so I won't go into it to deep. But I would happily recommend it.

RACKED: Mutant Parsnip Wine & Elderberry Wine

Grabbed a hour from the day today to rack the Parsnip and Elderberry wines. Fermentation has slowed down on both of the wines now with just the odd bubble now and again. Racked both the wines on top of 1 tsp of bentonite mixed into 1/4 of a pint of hot water that was allowed to cool for 30 minutes.

I add this direct to the clean demijohn and then rack the wine straight on top. Both these wines will now sit in the warm for another few weeks just to make sure they have finished fermenting. Once they are a bit clearer, I'll hit them both with a campden tablet each, slosh them both back up and them move to a cool place to fully clear before getting ready to bottle them both.

RACKED: Mutant Parsnip Wine & Elderberry Wine

Grabbed a hour from the day today to rack the Parsnip and Elderberry wines. Fermentation has slowed down on both of the wines now with just the odd bubble now and again. Racked both the wines on top of 1 tsp of bentonite mixed into 1/4 of a pint of hot water that was allowed to cool for 30 minutes.

I add this direct to the clean demijohn and then rack the wine straight on top. Both these wines will now sit in the warm for another few weeks just to make sure they have finished fermenting. Once they are a bit clearer, I'll hit them both with a campden tablet each, slosh them both back up and them move to a cool place to fully clear before getting ready to bottle them both.

Monday 27 January 2014

Bottled :Townhouse Ale

Well the Townhouse Ale has been sitting in the fermenting bucket for 12 days or so and has finished fermenting as far as I can tell, the Final SG is at 1006 down from 1068 giving a ABV of 7.7%.

I was hoping it would clear a lot more than it has, but I'm not to concerned as very old Ales made with Honey from my research are cloudy as a rule. I sure that as time goes by and it conditions in the bottle I will get a lot clearer. Each bottle has been primed with a 1/2 tsp of Brewing Sugar as I don't want the Ale to be very fizzy to replicate Ales of old.

I had a little glass of the Townhouse Ale (which looks like Prison Hooch) and it's quite drinkable, it certainly won't win any competitions. The hops come through the Honey okay, and it's bitter enough on the pallet. The honey has taken center stage as I knew it would with that amount in the brew.

I'm quite pleased on how it turned out, it's a drinkable Ale and I hope after warm conditioning for a week or so, then a few weeks in the cool, it will clear out lovely. If not, so be it, I'll still drink the bugger. :)

Bottled :Townhouse Ale

Well the Townhouse Ale has been sitting in the fermenting bucket for 12 days or so and has finished fermenting as far as I can tell, the Final SG is at 1006 down from 1068 giving a ABV of 7.7%.

I was hoping it would clear a lot more than it has, but I'm not to concerned as very old Ales made with Honey from my research are cloudy as a rule. I sure that as time goes by and it conditions in the bottle I will get a lot clearer. Each bottle has been primed with a 1/2 tsp of Brewing Sugar as I don't want the Ale to be very fizzy to replicate Ales of old.

I had a little glass of the Townhouse Ale (which looks like Prison Hooch) and it's quite drinkable, it certainly won't win any competitions. The hops come through the Honey okay, and it's bitter enough on the pallet. The honey has taken center stage as I knew it would with that amount in the brew.

I'm quite pleased on how it turned out, it's a drinkable Ale and I hope after warm conditioning for a week or so, then a few weeks in the cool, it will clear out lovely. If not, so be it, I'll still drink the bugger. :)

Sunday 26 January 2014

Bargains : Brewing Equipment

Grabbed a couple of bargains this week, the first was a couple of bags of Dextrose Monohydrate or Brewing Sugar for the costly sum of £1.60 per 1kg bag.. Always handy to have around the brewing cupboard. I also needed a bag to make up the Stout (Coopers) Beer kit I got for Xmas.


Next mega bargains where found at Dunelm where I only popped in to get a few cheap beer and wine glasses for the Brewpub that we are now building. 


We found a reduced section with a load of Muntons beer equipment on sale all at big Discounts.

Got a Siphoning kit for 55p, was just after the tap really as I keep misplacing mine. Found a Co2 injector to go with my barrel for £4.75 and loads of bulbs to go with it. In fact I got all the Co2 bulbs they had, so they should last me quite a while. 7 packs of ten Co2 bulbs for £6.93

Bargains : Brewing Equipment

Grabbed a couple of bargains this week, the first was a couple of bags of Dextrose Monohydrate or Brewing Sugar for the costly sum of £1.60 per 1kg bag.. Always handy to have around the brewing cupboard. I also needed a bag to make up the Stout (Coopers) Beer kit I got for Xmas.


Next mega bargains where found at Dunelm where I only popped in to get a few cheap beer and wine glasses for the Brewpub that we are now building. 


We found a reduced section with a load of Muntons beer equipment on sale all at big Discounts.

Got a Siphoning kit for 55p, was just after the tap really as I keep misplacing mine. Found a Co2 injector to go with my barrel for £4.75 and loads of bulbs to go with it. In fact I got all the Co2 bulbs they had, so they should last me quite a while. 7 packs of ten Co2 bulbs for £6.93

Gifts : First Steps in Winemaking by C.J.J. Berry

Good old postie dropped of a present for me this week from my Amazon wish List,

 First Steps in Winemaking by C.J.J. Berry 

Having heard so much about this book it very nice to have it in my collection, and after a quick flip through it looks as tho' it may be a well referenced book, as it has lots of recipes and information.


Many thanks for the book must go to my lovely Wife Jane.

Gifts : First Steps in Winemaking by C.J.J. Berry

Good old postie dropped of a present for me this week from my Amazon wish List,

 First Steps in Winemaking by C.J.J. Berry 

Having heard so much about this book it very nice to have it in my collection, and after a quick flip through it looks as tho' it may be a well referenced book, as it has lots of recipes and information.


Many thanks for the book must go to my lovely Wife Jane.

Tuesday 21 January 2014

Tasting : Pumpkin Beer (Bit early)

Well as I sat in front of the TV last night, it was bound to happen. I opened a very young bottle of Pumpkin Beer, it had only been in the bottles for 2 full days, warm  conditioning in the dining room. It was still a little cloudy but that's fine by me. This one was a little sweeter than the last batch, mainly due to the increased use of pumpkin flesh I would think. Anyhow it's a lovely drinking beer, so I had another just to check.

I'll try and leave the others to condition properly but we will see.

Tasting : Pumpkin Beer (Bit early)

Well as I sat in front of the TV last night, it was bound to happen. I opened a very young bottle of Pumpkin Beer, it had only been in the bottles for 2 full days, warm  conditioning in the dining room. It was still a little cloudy but that's fine by me. This one was a little sweeter than the last batch, mainly due to the increased use of pumpkin flesh I would think. Anyhow it's a lovely drinking beer, so I had another just to check.

I'll try and leave the others to condition properly but we will see.

Potted up The Chillies & Aubergines



The time has come to properly pot on the Chillies, Peppers and Aubergines and fill up the capillary system in the grow box.

Twenty one days from sowing the seeds they are all coming on great guns, now that they have been potted into the small pots with Westland John Innes No 2 Potting-On Compost the little seedlings should hopefully put on quite a bit of growth in the next few weeks.



I've got the following all potted up :

Sunday 19 January 2014

Did It Work?

After the issues we had recently with the digger and devastation, we were very interested to see what the allotment would look like after all the rain again this week.  What a surprise.  No difference at all.  It seems our allotment was mashed for no real reason and our thoughts were justified.  The flooding occurs due to surface water making its way down the hill.  It is nothing to do with the gulley or canal.  The gulley is no deeper and looks exactly the same behind the heightened bank.  We think the gap in the bank further up had previously helped to drain the surface water into the gulley and now that the digger has filled in the gap, the water has nowhere to go.  I think the flooding is worse now than it was before....

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Luckily our plot is still a little higher even though it is at the bottom of the hill so the water pools just at our boundary and we suffered little damage, same as previous years.  Our onions and garlic are underwater but we knew that may happen so we werent surprised.  That corner has flooded before.

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The only part of our site otherwise that has flooded is the area behind the shed and greenhouse (where the digger took out our compost heaps).  That area has never flooded before so in fact the work that was done to prevent flooding has made it worse!!!

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So despite us explaining the mechanics of water movement and informing the site bods that the flooding has nothing to do with the bank heights or gulley depth, and despite a digger causing destruction and a mud pit, nothing has changed.  I feel a little smug.

Elsewhere on the site.... better off growing rice.

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Saturday 18 January 2014

RACKED: Mutant Parsnip Wine

Well the parsnip wine has been 10 days fermenting in it's bucket and as the recipe says today's the day to transfer the wine into a demijohn. So it's all been strained through a sieve into a nice clean demijohn

Fermentation has slowed down quite a lot, but I'll keep it indoors for quite a while. Haven't taken a SG reading at this stage as I tend to let the wines ferment out, then shift it to a cooler place to let it clear.

This wine will need racking again in a few weeks so I'll have a quick taste test then, not that I'm looking forward to that much as I'm not a huge fan of parsnips. But I sure the wife will like it, well she better, as there will be 4-5 bottles that will need to be drunk.. lol

Bottled: Pumpkin Beer

Bottled up the second batch of Pumpkin beer today, SG ended at 1012, so an ABV of 3.5%. This is the second batch of Pumpkin beer that I have made now. This one had a bit more pumpkin in than the last one.. 1300g in this batch, so 400g more than last time. But still not used any "apple pie" spice as some recipes suggest, I have another home grown pumpkin for another batch so might add spices next time.



20 bottles all labeled up and warm conditioning inside the house. Each bottle primed with 1/2 tsp of brewing sugar. Had a quick taste when I took the final SG reading and it's another good beer. Even tho it sat in the no-chill cube for nearly a month before fermenting it.

Bottled: Pumpkin Beer

Bottled up the second batch of Pumpkin beer today, SG ended at 1012, so an ABV of 3.5%. This is the second batch of Pumpkin beer that I have made now. This one had a bit more pumpkin in than the last one.. 1300g in this batch, so 400g more than last time. But still not used any "apple pie" spice as some recipes suggest, I have another home grown pumpkin for another batch so might add spices next time.



20 bottles all labeled up and warm conditioning inside the house. Each bottle primed with 1/2 tsp of brewing sugar. Had a quick taste when I took the final SG reading and it's another good beer. Even tho it sat in the no-chill cube for nearly a month before fermenting it.

RACKED: Mutant Parsnip Wine

Well the parsnip wine has been 10 days fermenting in it's bucket and as the recipe says today's the day to transfer the wine into a demijohn. So it's all been strained through a sieve into a nice clean demijohn



Fermentation has slowed down quite a lot, but I'll keep it indoors for quite a while. Haven't taken a SG reading at this stage as I tend to let the wines ferment out, then shift it to a cooler place to let it clear.

This wine will need racking again in a few weeks so I'll have a quick taste test then, not that I'm looking forward to that much as I'm not a huge fan of parsnips. But I sure the wife will like it, well she better, as there will be 4-5 bottles that will need to be drunk.. lol

RACKED: Mutant Parsnip Wine

Well the parsnip wine has been 10 days fermenting in it's bucket and as the recipe says today's the day to transfer the wine into a demijohn. So it's all been strained through a sieve into a nice clean demijohn



Fermentation has slowed down quite a lot, but I'll keep it indoors for quite a while. Haven't taken a SG reading at this stage as I tend to let the wines ferment out, then shift it to a cooler place to let it clear.

This wine will need racking again in a few weeks so I'll have a quick taste test then, not that I'm looking forward to that much as I'm not a huge fan of parsnips. But I sure the wife will like it, well she better, as there will be 4-5 bottles that will need to be drunk.. lol

Germination has begun.

18 days since sowing the chillies nearly all of them have now germinated, just 2 coir pellets have nothing as yet.

They have now all been moved under the grow lamp, the coir pellet just placed into the pots for now. I'll pot them up in a few days with some compost then they can sit on the capillarity sheet under the lamps where they can grow on nice and strong.


In with the chillies I also had sown the Black Beauty Aubergines, Jane had a go at growing these last year, but I have been put in charge of them this year.

 

 

Wednesday 15 January 2014

Brewday : Townhouse Ale

After reading Country Wines by Mary Aylett (published 1953) that I received as a gift from my Amazon Wish list. I just had to give this simple beer recipe a go. I've called it Townhouse ale due to the fact that in the book it describes how malted barley was unavailable to town dweller, but they could get hold of pure extract of malt from a well-known (at the time) chemists, where it was sold strictly as a health food.

The recipe in the book is as follows:

For two gallons, take two pounds of malt, three handfuls of hops, or less if the beer is wanted mild, and one pound of sugar.

Bring one gallon of water to a temperature of about 60 deg. Fahrenheit and dissolve in it the malt. When it is well mixed put into it the sugar and stir the mixture until all is melted together, and pour the brew into a two-gallon stone jar. Put the hops into a saucepan with two pints of water and boil for about ten minutes, then strain into the cask. Repeat this twice more, using the same hops each time, to extract from them their full flavour. Make up the amount in the cask with cold water. When the wort is at the usual blood-heat add a teaspoonful of brewer's yeast, cover closely and stand in a warm kitchen. Fermentation will begin almost at once and the beer will be drinkable in forty-eight hours. In a week the beer will have a fine "head" and will be quite clear.

If it is necessary to keep the beer, it can be bottled off into ordinary beer bottles and the corks well screwed down. If a pound of honey is added to the wort the finished article will resemble strong ale.

I have tried to keep as true to the the text as possible by sourcing the malt extract from a health-food shop. However I do not own a two-gallon stone jar, so my plastic fermenting bin has taken it's place. The sugar used is Billington's Light Brown soft. Only because that is what I had in the cupboard at the time.

For the hops I should have used a traditional English hop like Fuggles or Goldings, but I have used Chinnook 12.5% AA only because I have loads of 2011 season leaf hops that need to be used in the bottom of the freezer, as they are quite high in Alpha Acid I used two large handfuls.



As the recipe states, if I add a pound of honey to the wort then I'd get a strong Ale so that's what I have done, just using a normal jar of supermarket honey.

For the yeast. I don't know how or where the brewers yeast would have been acquired. So I've used a Ale yeast that I had at hand. Mauribrew 514 Ale Yeast and used only half of the packet sprinkled direct onto the top of the wort. Not the yeast that is in the picture, that one's a Youngs Ale yeast.

The Gravity of this brew is starting out at 1064 and looks as though it'll make around about 18 x 500ml bottles worth and the yeast has already set to work, fizzing away lovely.


Brewday : Townhouse Ale

After reading Country Wines by Mary Aylett (published 1953) that I received as a gift from my Amazon Wish list. I just had to give this simple beer recipe a go. I've called it Townhouse ale due to the fact that in the book it describes how malted barley was unavailable to town dweller, but they could get hold of pure extract of malt from a well-known (at the time) chemists, where it was sold strictly as a health food.

The recipe in the book is as follows:

For two gallons, take two pounds of malt, three handfuls of hops, or less if the beer is wanted mild, and one pound of sugar.

Bring one gallon of water to a temperature of about 60 deg. Fahrenheit and dissolve in it the malt. When it is well mixed put into it the sugar and stir the mixture until all is melted together, and pour the brew into a two-gallon stone jar. Put the hops into a saucepan with two pints of water and boil for about ten minutes, then strain into the cask. Repeat this twice more, using the same hops each time, to extract from them their full flavour. Make up the amount in the cask with cold water. When the wort is at the usual blood-heat add a teaspoonful of brewer's yeast, cover closely and stand in a warm kitchen. Fermentation will begin almost at once and the beer will be drinkable in forty-eight hours. In a week the beer will have a fine "head" and will be quite clear.

If it is necessary to keep the beer, it can be bottled off into ordinary beer bottles and the corks well screwed down. If a pound of honey is added to the wort the finished article will resemble strong ale.

I have tried to keep as true to the the text as possible by sourcing the malt extract from a health-food shop. However I do not own a two-gallon stone jar, so my plastic fermenting bin has taken it's place. The sugar used is Billington's Light Brown soft. Only because that is what I had in the cupboard at the time.

For the hops I should have used a traditional English hop like Fuggles or Goldings, but I have used Chinnook 12.5% AA only because I have loads of 2011 season leaf hops that need to be used in the bottom of the freezer, as they are quite high in Alpha Acid I used two large handfuls.



As the recipe states, if I add a pound of honey to the wort then I'd get a strong Ale so that's what I have done, just using a normal jar of supermarket honey.

For the yeast. I don't know how or where the brewers yeast would have been acquired. So I've used a Ale yeast that I had at hand. Mauribrew 514 Ale Yeast and used only half of the packet sprinkled direct onto the top of the wort. Not the yeast that is in the picture, that one's a Youngs Ale yeast.

The Gravity of this brew is starting out at 1064 and looks as though it'll make around about 18 x 500ml bottles worth and the yeast has already set to work, fizzing away lovely.


Wednesday 8 January 2014

Mutant Parsnip Wine

My good lady Jane has been wanting me to make a Parsnip wine for a while now and we had been growing some parsnips down on the allotment for just that purpose. Unfortunately we have had to harvest them early as we have had some issues on the allotment we have had to deal with. Anyhow we dig them all up and they are small and rather freaky looking things indeed.

I have followed +Andy Hamilton's recipe for Parsnip wine on page 260 of his book Booze for Free. I think it is the most complicated recipe that I have done thus far, only due to the fact of the amount of pans and pots used, and making up a raisin syrup.

Anyhow it's currently cooling in a fermenting bucket, I'm not a big fan of parsnips myself but from what I have heard this wine doesn't taste to much of them, but we shall see in a few months or so.

 

Fermenting : Pumpkin Bitter

Way back last year I made up a pumpkin beer and it's been sitting in it's no-chill cube until I was allowed space in the dining room to ferment it. The wort has been sat in the cube for 29 days on top of 5g of Fuggles and 5g of Target home grown hops. It smelled lovley when I was pouring it into the fermention bucket on top of the required 2.5 liters of boiled water to bring the gravity down to the 3.6% ABV I am after.

The yeast used is Munton's standard Yeast that I had hanging around that needed to be used, so hopefully I'll see signs of fermentation quite soon.

Just as a side note, I ferment with all the trub and cold break, pretty much always have, and the beers come out just great.


Left to Right : Elderberry Wine, Pumpkin Beer, Parsnip wine,

Fermenting : Pumpkin Bitter

Way back last year I made up a pumpkin beer and it's been sitting in it's no-chill cube until I was allowed space in the dining room to ferment it. The wort has been sat in the cube for 29 days on top of 5g of Fuggles and 5g of Target home grown hops. It smelled lovley when I was pouring it into the fermention bucket on top of the required 2.5 liters of boiled water to bring the gravity down to the 3.6% ABV I am after.

The yeast used is Munton's standard Yeast that I had hanging around that needed to be used, so hopefully I'll see signs of fermentation quite soon.

Just as a side note, I ferment with all the trub and cold break, pretty much always have, and the beers come out just great.


Left to Right : Elderberry Wine, Pumpkin Beer, Parsnip wine,

Brewday: Mutant Parsnip Wine

My good lady Jane has been wanting me to make a Parsnip wine for a while now and we had been growing some parsnips down on the allotment for just that purpose. Unfortunately we have had to harvest them early as we have had some issues on the allotment we have had to deal with. Anyhow we dig them all up and they are small and rather freaky looking things indeed.



I have followed +Andy Hamilton's recipe for Parsnip wine on page 260 of his book Booze for Free. I think it is the most complicated recipe that I have done thus far, only due to the fact of the amount of pans and pots used, and making up a raisin syrup.

Anyhow it's currently cooling in a fermenting bucket, I'm not a big fan of parsnips myself but from what I have heard this wine doesn't taste to much of them, but we shall see in a few months or so.


Brewday: Mutant Parsnip Wine

My good lady Jane has been wanting me to make a Parsnip wine for a while now and we had been growing some parsnips down on the allotment for just that purpose. Unfortunately we have had to harvest them early as we have had some issues on the allotment we have had to deal with. Anyhow we dig them all up and they are small and rather freaky looking things indeed.



I have followed +Andy Hamilton's recipe for Parsnip wine on page 260 of his book Booze for Free. I think it is the most complicated recipe that I have done thus far, only due to the fact of the amount of pans and pots used, and making up a raisin syrup.

Anyhow it's currently cooling in a fermenting bucket, I'm not a big fan of parsnips myself but from what I have heard this wine doesn't taste to much of them, but we shall see in a few months or so.


Tuesday 7 January 2014

We will rebuild!!!

Well at least the sun was out today, can't say that it was dry because as Jane posted the plot is pretty much been turned into a mud pit. So now the task of rebuilding and sorting the mayhem out has begun.





After five and a half hours I have managed to tidy the plots up quite a bit, still loads and loads to do. Had to shift so much rubbish that the digger had dug up from the banks, old pallets, metal poles, and loads of plastic bags and sheeting.

I'm getting there now slowly, I'll be rebuilding the pallet compost heaps in a new location and are now stacked ready for the new build on plot 120.

Still have to move the shed back into a proper location, but it's still to muddy to do that and I'll need plenty of help to shift it anyway.


We have also had a good news from the Allotment committee, in that we will NOT be charged next season to plot 120 and this was confirmed by the Allotment chairman on site today. 

As well as the good will gesture of not having to pay for plot 120 next year, Our site Plot Secretary has had a phone around and some of the other site holders have given us permission to harvest kale and Brussels from their plots to replace what was plowed into the ground.

So all in all I'm feeling a little better. Once the shed is moved back and the pallet compost bins are rebuilt I think I just might be able to forget about the whole nasty situation.