Friday, January 1, 2010

For All You Do, This Stout's For You

I've been remiss in blogging about my homebrewing exploits - My last post about it was here - so lets get caught up.

I tried my own recipe for a red ale after tasting a very good one at BJ's. Didn't work out. I don't have the technique down to brew from grains so my skills restrict me to purely using extracts. It came out tasting kind of muddy - a whole bunch of malty flavors adding up to nothing. A tried a red ale kit and I'm working my way through the last of that. A little better but I've come to the conclusion my tastebuds just aren't that sophisticated. Might as well stick to the kits.

Next up for a cold, dark winter? An Irish stout. I'm using this kit from Coopers. It's been just about two weeks in the bottle so I cracked open the first one the other evening:


The heads not quite holding up just yet so I'll give it another few days before trying another one. The taste is good though - deep, rich, chocolatey. Just the way you want a stout to taste. And just the thing to help get you through a winter's night. Or day.

(For my online pal, Michael Hasenstab, come on by, buddy. I'll pour one for ya'.)

3 comments:

  1. Pete: Do you know of Kölsch? I thought that there were "dunkel" varieties of this but I may be confusing it with Dunkles Alt which was a very dark and hearty ale brewed in Northern Germany.

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  2. Thanks for dropping by, and thanks for the link. Sounds delish. Can't find an easy homebrew recipe so I'll have to buy some to see what it's like. I haven't found a dunkle variety of Kolsch so you may be right about the Dunkle Alt. I'm somewhat familiar with that - close to a Spaten Optimator, I think. If so, an incredible beer.

    Hey, you can drop by, too, and I'll poor ya' a stout or a red ale. You choose.

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