Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Hob Headless Porter

Brew #13: The Hob Headless: a porter modeled a bit after Deschutes Black Butte Porter and Anchor's Porter. Honestly, I cant quite remember exactly what recipes I referenced while working up my own, but what came out, tastes a lot like the above mentioned, esp. the Black Butte.



The name of the brew is inspired by an old English tale about a Hobgoblin they called "Hob Headless". I came across a mention of the tale during a recent re-reading of Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon. Looking for more info, all I could locate was one paragraph from a book titled Notes on the Folk-lore of the Northern counties of England and the borders by William Henderson. Wildcat assisted me in brewing (and bottling) this one, and also designed the labels. He did a great job imagining Hob Headless, and also included the blurb on one version of the label. A good brew for winter.





Hob Headless Porter
------------------------

Malts
-----
8 lbs Malt Extract
1 lb 2-Row
1 lb Special B
.5 lb Chocolate Malt
.25 lb Vienna
.25 lb Munich

Hops
----
2 oz Fuggles (4.5%)

Yeast
-----
White Labs Yorkshire Square Ale WLP037

Etc
---
1 lb Turbinado sugar
1 tablet Whirlfloc
1 capsule Servomyces

Basically followed what has become my "normal" method of one-step minimash brewing. I brought the first water (about 1.75 gallons) to 160 F and then added the specialty grains; Mashed for 45 mins; sparged with 170 F water; recirculated etc; 60 minute boil when it hit the flame. 1 oz Fuggles at 60min, 1 oz at 30min, then at 15min added the Turbinado, Whirlfloc & Servomyces.

Fermented at around 68-70

Primed with about 3 oz raw cane sugar

Brewed Sun, November 1, 2009
Racked Tue, November 17
Bottled Sat, November 21

Sunday, November 01, 2009

Dry Hopping


Dry Hopping: Rules! If you can drink it fast enough, otherwise, it can get a tad vegetal (most likely due to the bottled brew still having traces of hop pellets since it isnt strained like the initial wort)...

You can see, above, the beginning of the dry hopping process with the Green Door, as I was racking into the carboy. I put in two types of hop pellets, then two types in normal bud form (within a steamed (to sanitize) bag). Let those work in the brew for around 12 days, until the pellets had settled out to the bottom.

I plan to experiment again with dry hopping soon.

More of the process:





More later... Next up, Bilbo's Brandywine, and etc