Hey, everyone! Figured I’d fire up a homebrewing community and see if there’s any takers.

I know you’re out there, just as I was out there lurking on other similar sites. :D

Come here and brag with your latest creation. I’ll start, just brewed an unexpected wee heavy using Eitrhem kveik.

Cheers!

edit: typo

4 points
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I have a few things on the go at the moment.

Currently Fermenting:

A toasted coconut and cacao nib stout (going for a nice chocolatey stout with a sweet coconut finish à la Mounds or Bounty bars)

Currently Drinking:

A Sorachi Ace saison with some spices brewed with Omega - Jovaru.

A Brown Ale with Applewood-Smoked Hops that I’m not too happy with how the beer turned out which is a shame because this is my favorite beer label I have ever designed

Currently Aging (fairly long term):

A 16% oaked dessert mead with Lapsang Souchong and maple syrup (it’s probably somewhere around 4 years old at this point and has been blended several times over the years with various dry meads.

A bochet with cacao nibs that I’m still trying to figure out how to improve (it smells AMAZING and chocolatey but the body is too thin and acidic and just lacking in something)

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2 points

Nice spread!

If the bochet is lacking and blending’s your thing, have you considered blending it with a barleywine?

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3 points

That’s not a bad idea. I had thought to keep it purely a mead and maybe blend it with a sweet mead I have yet to make just to give it some body but honestly a nice big beer might be just the thing to give it some complexity. I think if I am to go down that route I might choose a nice big stout to blend it with because I think the roastiness might complement the chocolateyness of the bochet nicely.

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2 points

Thank you! I like making mead because it is high enough ABV that I can just let it age and do other brews whilst I work out what to do with it!

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1 point

Sure, I’m around, trying to figure out how subscribing works to this.

The one that always gets asked about is a hibiscus mead! I have fallen behind my usual brewing schedule this year, but there’s always five gallons of this around somewhere in production.

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1 point

Stoked to have found this community, as I’m very interested to start brewing after I move to my new house.

Have never brewed previously but have have sampled my fair share!

Will be keeping an eye out for pearls of wisdom and will likely ask a question or two.

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1 point
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I made some #Makgeolli, a milky white Korean rice “wine”. It’s made by fermenting steemed rice with the “nuruk” starter culture, which contains both the enzymes to break down the rice starches into sugar and the yeast cultures for turning the sugar into alcohol. I used the Danyangju recipe from A Primer on Brewing Makgeolli.

The most difficult part is finding the Nuruk online. I found it in a Korean online store as “Powdered Enzyme Amylase”. And you need a steamer that fits 1 kg of glutinous rice. But the fermentation is done in a single step after just around 7 days at room temperature.

Today I filled it into plastic water bottles. Not pretty on pictures but the store version is also sold in plastic and it makes it easier and safer to gauge the pressure, as it will contiue to ferment and make CO2 (though slowly after refrigeration).

I first tried Makgeolli in Asian supermarkets, but the exported one is pasteurized and not alive anymore, which is why I wanted to mak my own. The homemade one is much stronger in Alcohol than the store one, so usually I dilute it before drinking, and thus the 2L brewing yield is not that little.

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0 points

thanks for that! the reading material will help me further down the rice wine rabbit hole

what tasting notes are you getting on it?

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1 point

This only my second home-made batch overall, and I didn’t taste this one yet, so will speak from memory from my first batch. Also I have not much “tasting” expertise, so I can’t give a sommelier-style description. Makgeolli has this fine sparkling going on, a smooth mouth feel and is quiet sweet. Compared to other alcohols it’s maybe similar to Federweisser, a fresh, still sparkling white wine. Home-made makgeolli is surprisingly similar in taste to the one you get in the store, but has a bit more of a sour note. I did the variant where in addition to nuruk I added some brewer’s yeast which contains different yeast strains. If I remember correctly it might get even more sour and less alcoholic if you omit that, but not sure, never tried.

To be honest I never tried any other rice wines, makgeolli is my first brew after mead, and I like how simple it is, no need for aging or fermentation caps, no temperature control. Also due to my Korean girlfriend I’m very interested in Korean culture and its cuisine, especially its richness in fermented products.

Sandor Ellix Katz in the “Art of Fermentation” also describes a variant of Makgeolli with sweet potatoes, I might also experiment with that in the future. Surprisingly, in his book he has rice wines in the same category as beers and not as wines, because both are done through fermentation of grain using enzymes to bread down starches. Which in beer is done in a distinct fermentation step, but for rice alcohols usually happens in parallel to the alcohol fermentation.

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1 point

don’t sell yourself short on the tasting vocabulary, everybody’s interpretation is subjective and there is no standard. I understood and managed to get a picture of the thing you’re describing, so purpose achieved :)

if you want to have some fun, try looking through some whisky tasting notes with such enticing flavours as ‘harbor rope’, ‘wet dog’ and ‘kippers’

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Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider

!homebrewing@sopuli.xyz

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A community dedicated to homebrewing beer, mead, wine, cider and everything in between. If it ferments, bring it over here.

Share recipes, ideas, ask for feedback or just advice.


Some starting points for beginners:

Introduction to Beer Brewing

A basic mead primer

Quick and diry guide to fermenting fruit - cider and wine

Brewing software


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