Hop additions lined up for the brew |
I've made a lot in the stout/porter domain in the last few months so I wanted to brew something where the grain would take a backseat. My girlfriend loves IPAs and her birthday is coming up, so I elected to try to clone one of our favorites: Sierra Nevada's Celebration Ale.
There's quite a bit out there on the web about this beer -- rumor has it that the SN's master brewer spilled the beans about the recipe on a podcast at one point or another. For my attempt, the term 'clone' fits loosely at best. 'Inspired' is probably a better word. The heart and soul of the beer, in my opinion, is the liberal use of the big C hops: Chinook, Centennial, and Cascade. I think my beer will end up 10 points higher in OG (1.076 vs. 1.064), and a shade or two lighter (10 SRM vs. 14). Mine also has more late addition hops (compared to various clones floating around on the web) which will add a lot of flavor and aroma but not necessarily IBUs. I kept my saccharification rest temperature down at 150F to keep the beer dry. A pinch of carapils/dextrine malt was added for mouthfeel.
Doughing in |
1) Remove chloramines from the brewing water
2) Balance the alkalinity and ensure proper mash pH
3) Use minerals to accentuate certain characteristics of the beer
Chloramines are used to disinfect water and make it fit for drinking. It used to be that chlorine fulfilled this purpose, but chlorine is significantly more volatile and will escape the water with time and/or heat. Chloramines are much more stubborn in this regard -- which is bad news for brewers as they create off flavors in the beer. Charcoal filters or campden tablets are commonly used to eliminate chloramines. Personally, I use Boston tap water which is disinfected using ozone rather than chloramines, so it's a non-issue. Boston water is also notoriously soft (not much mineral content, alkalinity) making it good for brewing. Reportedly, Harpoon brewery does not treat the water for their beer at all... Though I suspect that this is probably just a rumor.
Generally brewers start with fairly soft water and add salts to adjust pH and highlight flavors in the beer. In my opinion, water adjustment seems like a slippery slope to a much more complicated brew day. I suspect I'll head that direction eventually, but I'd like to hold off for now. The only concession I'm making at this point is to use a program (I like EZ Water) to input my grain bill and water profile and calculate the necessary addition of acidulated malt to bring the mash pH down to the 'acceptable' range. For example, with this brew I need about 0.2 lbs of Acid. Malt to bring the pH into the 5.6-5.4 window. Without verification through an actual measurement of the pH, however, I am really only going on faith that the mash is in the ideal range.
All my previous beers have had a lot of roasted malts which naturally pull the mash pH down to a more ideal number. That's not the case with this beer, which gives me an opportunity to evaluate the pH through the perception of tannin bitterness in the final product. Tannins in the beer usually indicate to high a mash pH (some suggest high pH sparge water can do this too). Eventually, once my brew day is fairly comfortable, I'll likely considering using some salts; particularly Gypsum in my hoppy beers to increase the sulfates. Sulfates reportedly dry out the beer a bit and increase the perception of hoppiness. I'll be curious with this one to see if I'm left wanting in terms of the hop character. A side by side test with SN's Celebration Ale should serve nicely for this purpose.
As a last note, I ran out of the OneStep sanitizer I had been using for my previous batches. I read up on Star San and Iodophor sanitizers -- both of which are supposed to work much better (i.e. kill about ten times the amount of bugs for a fixed contact time). I ended up purchasing a big ol' 32 oz container of Star San. I made up some solution in a spray bottle and used it for sanitizing everything on this brew day and for bottling my Oatmeal Stout. It is without a doubt the easiest sanitation method I've used to date. I can't recommend it highly enough.
The boil and hot break forming |
Grain Bill
US 2-Row: 9.5 lbs (93.0%)
Crystal 40L: 0.5 lbs (4.8%)
Carapils/Dextrine: 0.25 lbs (2.2%)
Acidulated Malt: 0.2 lbs (0.0%)*
*There's some debate as to whether acid malt can actually add sugars to the wort. Essentially, if the malt is acidulated by being sprayed with lactic acid, it will act as a normal grain. However, if it is soaked to promote the natural growth of Lactobacillus (which in turn produces lactic acid), than one can assume the sugars are consumed and it will have no extract potential. I've assumed the latter in this case.
Single infusion mash @ 150F for 1 hour
Hop Schedule
Chinook (12% AA): 0.5 oz, 30 min
Centennial (8% AA): 0.25 oz, 20 min
Cascade (4% AA): 0.25 oz, 20 min
Centennial (8% AA): 0.25 oz, 15 min
Cascade (4% AA): 0.25 oz, 15 min
Centennial (8% AA): 0.25 oz, 10 min
Cascade (4% AA): 0.25 oz, 10 min
Centennial (8% AA): 0.25 oz, 5 min
Cascade (4% AA): 0.25 oz, 5 min
Centennial (8% AA): 0.25 oz, 0 min
Cascade (4% AA): 0.25 oz, 0 min
Centennial (8% AA): 0.25 oz, dry hop, ~ 5 days
Cascade (4% AA): 0.25 oz, dry hop, ~ 5 days
Yeast
Fermentis Safale US-05 (one 11.5 g packet)
Stats
SRM: 7.8
IBU: 68
OG: 1.076
Brew house efficiency: 73%
Batch size: 3.5 gallons
Notes
Brewed on 2/1/2014
Pre-heated tun by adding strike water (3.75 gal) at +10F above strike temp. Doughed in when water hit 164F. Grain bed was at 153F after stirring. Added one ice cube, stirred, grain bed hit 150F. Mashed for an hour, grain bed lost 2F. Ran off 2.05 gal, SG 1.090 (92% conversion efficiency). Sparged with 2 gallons, hit 4.2 gallons of pre-boil wort (SG 1.063). Boiled 75 minutes, added hops as directed above. Strained to remove excessive hop matter from wort. 3.5 gal of OG 1.076 (73% BHE) wort into the fermenter with rehydrated US-05.
2/2/2014
Some airlock activity after 15 hours (1 bubble/min). Around 24 hours, the airlock is steadily bubbling along.
2/3/2014
36 hours in. Despite 3 gallons of head space, there is so much airlock activity that the Star San is foaming up in the airlock!
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