Saturday, April 27, 2013

Wa-San Dark Saison

I brewed up an experimental saison a little while back - experimental both because I've never actually done a proper saison before (and with the notoriously finicky Wyeast 3724 Belgain Saison yeast, at that), and because I decided to add some Thai red rice (Alter Eco's Thai Ruby Red) and kaffir lime leaves.  This was my first batch with temperature control, too, since saison yeast likes it hot (30+ Celsius, which is pretty hot for yeast) - I had the whole fermenter in a water bath with an aquarium heater.  It was a learning experience.

Today, I bottled it, and despite all the ways the beer could have gone wrong, it seems to have gone more or less entirely right!  After a few weeks at high temps it settled dead-on at my calculated final gravity (1.010), so it should be around 5.1% ABV - a little high for a saison, but lower than my stuff usually comes out.  Bottling went really smoothly, apart from once again overestimating my volume; it'll be a bit over-carbed, but it's a Belgian so it should be fine and I used good bottles.  But most of all, it tastes great!  I could be happier - it could have more Belgian character, if I'd gotten the temperature up after the first day instead of the third - but I think the nuttiness of the rice comes through and the lime leaves don't overwhelm everything else, and there's nothing I'd call an off flavour, so hooray!  Not bad for my first try with a challenging style.

Recipe for ~8L (small batch brewing!) as follows:

  • 1 Kg pale ale malt
  • 454g Thai red rice
  • 125g "Special B" (Really just a variant of Munich in this case)
  • 125g dark crystal malt (120L)
Mash at around 148F for 60 minutes.
  • 8g Amarillo hops boiled for 45 minutes
  • ~8 Kaffir lime leaves boiled for 5 minutes
Ferment with Belgian saison yeast, starting around 70F and ramping up to 90F over the next few days.

In other news, the blood orange bacon is great!  I need to work more on my smoking technique, and maybe not leave the skin on next time, because the orange flavour and the smokiness are both a bit uneven, but it's really good.  I smoked it over oolong again, mixed with barley and a citrusy chai.  Bits of it are really intensely citrusy, and bits are really smokey, but mostly it's very nice.  I'm definitely going to keep working on using zest in my cure.

The mustard was a bit less of a success.  It turns out I underestimated the amount of liquid required, and had to add more beer.  The only bottle I had at the time I was willing to sacrifice was a Big Rock Barghest barleywine (drank a bit as well, review = shrug), so the De Ranke XX didn't come through like I hoped.  I'll have to try again.  It's still nice grainy mustard, though.

My cheese is coming along swimmingly, but I haven't tried any yet.  The rind looks lovely, just pure white.  It's in the stage where it gets really soft, almost like brie, which I was told to expect - apparently it will firm up and turn into a nice hard cheese if I give it another few weeks.  I'll have to eat at least some in the state it's in now, though, just so I can compare.

I choose to believe all this success is a good sign for my stand-up set on Monday.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Blood Orange Bacon

Started curing some blood-orange bacon today.  Recipe as follows:

  1. Pork Belly - ~1.24kg
  2. TenderQuick - 31g
  3. Brown Sugar - 86.8g
  4. Malt Syrup - 71.8g
  5. Ground Cinnamon - 9g
  6. Blood Orange Zest - 14.6g (4 oranges)
This is modified from the bacon recipe I learned at Charcuterie 101 from Shovel and Fork - the biggest change, or at least the one that worries me, is subbing TenderQuick for the basic cure we used that day; I've done my homework and the ratios should be about the same, though.  Anyway, I'll let it cure for a week, and then tea-smoke it (over oolong - worked great for my first batch).

I've also got some beer mustard going, using De Ranke XX Bitter: about 250g of mustard seeds, 3:2 black to yellow, with ~1 1/4 cups of beer and a bit less than 1/2 a cup of malt vinegar.  I think that's a bit too much liquid, actually, but I'll be adding a few more things after the seeds have soaked for a bit and it should work out.

And I pulled my cheese out of the "cave" (read: box in my fridge) and wrapped it.  Mold looks pretty good, smells good, I think these are going to work!