At first I wanted to make an English barley wine, but I soon found out that the Centennial hops used for bittering impose a really strong bitterness, so this beer came out like an American barley wine. I'm very happy about it and think that it is a good one. When I tasted it two weeks after bottling I was scared by how harsh the bittering hops were. Another three weeks later the beer has mellowed and now present itself as a nice and very drinkable barley wine. I look forward to see how this one develops the coming years.
I hope to be making a new barley wine every year. Next year I'm considering something similar to North Coast Old Stock Ale.
Added 1.25ts CaCO3 (calcium carbonate) and 0.5ts CaSO4 (gypsum) to enhance the hops.
The batch was brewed 2008-11-17 and bottled 2008-12-03.
Style:
Barley wine
Type:
25 liters. All grain, batch sparge
Colour:
37 EBC (Brown)
Bitterness:
60 IBU
Malts:
10600g Pale malt, Weyermann
2400g Aromatic malt, 50 EBC, Dingemans
300g Crystal malt, 150 EBC, Weyermann
Mash:
65C, 90 min
56% efficiency
Hops:
120g Centennial pellets, 9.1% 60 min
40g East Kent Goldings pellets, 4.8%, 10 min
Yeast:
2 packs Safale US-05 dry yeast
Boil:
180 min
Fermentation:
19 C
OG: 1.095 FG: 1.018 abv: 10.1%
Monday, November 17, 2008
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