Saturday, February 5, 2011

beer fairy

It is perhaps not as complicated as we thought. Beer changes over time. The Paradise ale is flagging, while thwe stout continues to gain flavor and the Hilo Red grows in promise. We need to focus on consistency within one batch. The color of the new brown ale is amazing--a balance between hops and malt flavors? Stay Tuned! (What shall we do for the new Label? My recent laptop breakdown kinda presents a challenge.)

Friday, January 7, 2011

Jim, drop the other shoe!

So, how did the second bottle taste? Does the beer fairy visit only my house?

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Not so STOUT

After seeing Michaels post and picture of our Big Island Stout I couldn't wait to give it a quaff. Unfortunately, a very uneven beer. Very little head and a flatness seems to indicate that I go a bottle that was not as highly carbonated as the one photographed. Color was a dirty brown as opposed to a chocolate shading I would have expected from a Stout. Much like our first batch-some bottles were good and some barely drinkable. I am sure the short fermenting cycle is the cause for the lack of consistent quality.

Hopefully bottle 2 will be a winner.

I think the Hilo Red is going to rock. Great color, nose and it was fermenting 18 hours after we pitched. Hi ho Hilo, away . . .

Sunday, January 2, 2011

STOUT!


My first bottle of Big Island Stout was quite good. The carbonation level of the first bottel was high (I'm hoping we have no bottle bombs). Obviously, the final priming and bottling is a huge piece (and the honey/DME combo a fine choice). In our first batch, certain bottles are pretty good, and others are dishwater. Seems to me that I can tell which is which when I pop the cap--high carbonation, good beer; poor carbonation, dishwater. The second bottle of stout was not as carbonated, and ultimately less interesting. We have got to improve aeration and mixing prior to bottling. I'm worried about the Hilo Red for this reason. We can do a more reliable job next time.