Art and I made an evening out of future ale last night and brewed our third batch of beer ever. An IPA, of course, cause we are addicted to those green beauties called hops. For the past two years we have grown and dried our own hops and put them into our beer! It's the most satisfying feeling ever, taking a drink from a cold, hoppy, delicious bottle of your own homegrown and homebrewed India Pale Ale.

I saw it bubble tonight!
If you've ever brewed your own beer than you know how sweet it is to witness the first time the airlock and stopper lets a bubble through. That means the yeast is going to work at fermenting your precious and hard-earned wort (wort is what beer is called before it has any yeast added to make it alcoholic). If bubbling never happens it means something isn't going right, so I am very grateful this moment that the bubbles have begun! If you have any interest in creating your own beer perhaps you'd like to read my blog entry from last February where I document the brew-day process step by step. I am quite proud of that entry, as I used it to help my own self along the way this time. Sometimes those brewing books can be confusing....

We stuck our bucket by the woodstove this evening cause the wort needed to warm up a bit to get that yeast going. Here's a pic of it without a cover, but the light has to stay out - so right now it's blanketed in wool.
Art and I are so lucky that his grandmother's property has been blessed with 30-year-old hop vines. They told us that they had actually tried to remove the vines on repeated occasion...but when we found out the treasure we were sitting on (we used to live there) we made immediate use of the honor. We did nothing more but tie some lines of string to the top of an old antenna and water the ground....alot. They grew inches every day. Next thing you know we were cutting down masses of hops. That was 2009. This past year we got about twice as many! I still haven't even fertilized the ground ever (I shall this spring tho because those sweet vines deserve it!), but thar she grew. Beautiful, huge, fat hops that were filled with the yellow dusty gold they call lupelin. It's what gives the hops their flavor. It's what gives good BEER its flavor. We cut them down this past year in different sessions and then lay them to dry on screens. Then we smashed them tight into double freezer bags and put them into our freezer, to be stored until our first brew day. We waited a few months because we were so busy, but it was so fun pulling them out and putting them to use!



We got so many bags of hops this year, this is just a fraction! We still have so many of the green delights (in case you want to add a few to your own brew:)

There's our dirty, sticky brew. It's extremely sugary, because basically all it is is water, sugars from grains, and giant bags of hops added in. You boil that brew for a full hour and a half. This time we had the company of the lovely Jorden Mingle, as he's ready to start a batch of his own soon and wanted to watch the process. Here's a photo of him (kind of out of place but it's all I could find), taken from the Epic Dust blog, a western short film series that Cinema Caldera is creating here in El Dorado County.


Sterilizing equipment is extremely important! That's the fermenting bucket, before the wort is in it, filled with a sterilizing solution. I have to soak anything that touches the future wort in that solution for a full minute.
Cooling the wort as quickly as possible. We did ours with ice and a bathtub (the po' man's way).

Kind of an idiotic pic, but it's the only one cause let's just say I'm the brewhand and Art is the photographer. I'm thankful he took any pics at all though, cause I didn't take a one.
So ladies and gentlemen, somewhere in the beginning of February, our Hopular Valentine's beer shall be ready for the tasting. In the meantime, I'm watching those bubbles rise up, and it's extremely fulfilling.
11 comments:
man how i love beer! and these photos are making me want one now :D
that's so awesome that you have 30 year old vines! what a treat. we have friends that make their own beer and it's always so delicious. i'm sure yours will be too. happy brewing!
I'm not a big beer girl (and thus am incredibly ignorant about anything beer related) and am so surprised at how pretty hops are. They look like wee green pine cones. Awesome that you grow your own too :) Enjoy your brew!
CAN'T WAIT! i admire you guys for going through this intense project and the outcomes have been so delicious; it's so rad to think you created it with your own energy. someday we'll have our own BREWERY; you, art, and jorden can be the brewmasters and darin will run the campground and we'll have a tiny vintage clothing store attached run by becky and me. woo hoo! dream big.
Adie Beatty!!! You are amazing. I love how passionate you are about it. Its too darn cute. Homemade is the greatest. miss you xoxo
YES! How exciting!! We just picked up a 'Brewing Quality Beers' book at Hospice. Someday we hope to brew our own too. Im so excited to taste yours (although ya'll love the hops flavor more than I ever could!)
If you ever want to borrow the book anytime, youre welcome to. Seems like you got this ish down though!
Good luck lady! Enjoy those bubbles!
Wait! I just looked back at your old entry and we have the SAME book!
Ash- that book is THE WORKS. The only thing that was difficult about it is the fact that it says the same things a few time over in different sections of the book. So it tells you how make beer at the beginning, but then it does tell you AGAIN-with more detail- and then even maybe one more time depending on the kind of beer? Anyhoo-that is the book that the Sierra Moonshine people in Grass Valley highly recommend for beginners. It wouldn't have been so hard to compute if I had read it AT ALL before our first try. But I just went in for the gold.
I do want to make a lager at some point...it's kind of a different process, or a stout....yum!
Oh and I mean it was difficult because it can be hard referring to the right part of the book that you are thinking of cause the info you seek might be in one of three sections....but if you read it ahead of time I'm sure it will make perfect sense. Plus......you and E's heads combined? ABSOLUTE INTELLIGENCE AND UNDERSTANDING.
:)
Wowza! What a fascinating post. I'm so impressed. Hubby started his hops last year and in spite lack of full sun they did fairly well. We're hoping they'll really take off this year, both in terms of privacy providing coverage as well as delicious beer. Like Sara above, I never liked beer before I came to this country, but those locally brewed ipas have melted my heart (especially a not so local one that I think is actually brewed near ya'll...)
I hope Heather's big dream comes true some day soon. Nothing better than shopping hand-picked vintage a little tipsy...
Okay so it's 7AM and I really want some beer now.
And I can't wait to meet you too! (That's not grammatical is it? ;)
Oh this is fascinating! I love IPAs and I am super impressed by your homegrown hops. I can't wait to hear how it tastes - I'm sure it will be delicious.
Ok....to anyone I see in person in the next month...I'm handing you one of these beers! I love sharing our final product it's half of the joy!
Our first two beers really did turn out just as good or better than we could have hoped so I'm crossing my fingers on this one. It's being a bit funny in the fermenter...the "krausen" fell too soon and such....but I have faith!
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