Brewing Instructions

Smokin’ Homebrew

By K. Florian Klemp Published March 2010, Volume 31, Number 1 1 Comment | Post a Comment

Thoughts of a crackling fire, a smoky slab of salmon, and glass of smoked porter are sure to stir primal reflection as the permeation of smoke melds food and ambiance. Smoked brews are not particularly common, but are easily crafted. Some styles fairly beg for a dose of smoke as a complement to toasty or dark malts. Others, especially porters, simply look like they should be smoky. Have a bent for historical brewing? Smoked malt reconnects brewers to days when essentially all beer had a smoky tinge. Using today’s versions as a starting point, it is easy to cobble together one of the many styles that would benefit from this addition. It is as easy as incorporating commercially available smoked malt into a recipe or, for the true hobbyist, fashioning your own. Read More…

All in for All-Grain

By K. Florian Klemp Published November 2009, Volume 30, Number 5 1 Comment | Post a Comment

The allure of leaping into all-grain brewing is all too often discouraged by unnecessary trepidation. There is the notion that is it cluttered with calculations and technical expertise, coupled with an air of alchemy and magic. It takes a little of both, but isn’t nearly as unforgiving and complicated as it seems, and in fact, can become rather routine and simple after just a few batches.
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Freestylin’

By Randy Mosher Published May 2009, Volume 30, Number 2 0 Comments | Post a Comment

For most brewers, our notions of beer are strongly shaped by classic beer styles. Beers like pale ales, stouts and bocks are convenient landmarks, beacons of stability in a sea of possibilities. We tend to jump from style to style, and in doing so they give us support as we learn to brew.

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A Yardful of Lawnmower Beers

By Randy Mosher Published July 2008, Volume 29, Number 3 0 Comments | Post a Comment

It’s ninety-eight in the shade and the sun is beating down with the heat of a freshly made TIG weld. The blue smoke of small engines chokes the air. Thirst rules. The barley wine can wait until the first snowfall. Forget sipping. I need something to quaff!

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Harvest Ales, Redux

By Randy Mosher Published November 2007, Volume 28, Number 5 0 Comments | Post a Comment

Picture yourself living in a pre-industrial Northern Europe. You and the rest of the village have toiled through a long, hot summer in the fields drinking screechy small beers and the last precious remnants of the March beer. Eventually, the new barley is ready to harvest, but you still have to wait for its long journey through malting, brewing and fermenting before it finally flows into your mug. Ahh, ambrosia! This is a reason to celebrate.

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Freakin’ the Euro-Beers

By Randy Mosher Published September 2007, Volume 28, Number 4 0 Comments | Post a Comment

It must be something about the Reinheitsgebot. This ancient and hallowed document, scribed onto goatskin, the symbol of all that is Germanic brewing, has intimidated us all into keeping to the straight and narrow—even though it technically doesn’t even apply to Germans themselves anymore. While we Americans seem willing to twist venerable British styles into unrecognizability, we have much more of a worshipful attitude regarding Continental lagers. Let’s see if we can change that.

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