Cask Conditioning. Eric Kraus twitter: lbbrewery homebrewtalk: laughingboysbrew

Similar documents
Cask Ale - Keeping it Real on the Street

Hosting Cask Ale Events

British Cask Beer (real ale)

Cellarmanship Skills and Techniques for Serving Cask Conditioned Beer

Cantwell, Allen, and Forhan. Beer from the Stainless: Brewing Techniques Nov/Dec Timothy O Rourke, Live Ale. The New Brewer March/April 1996

Cask or keg. Out of the cask

Packaging (Large pack) Kevin Mutch Peripatetic Brewer 25 April 2018

5 Litre Party Keg Manual

Draught System Troubleshooting & Reference Manual

Necessary equipment. - Food grade fermenter or bucket with airtight lid - Airlock - Syphon tube - Bottles or a pressure barrel (keg) with S30 valve

Heron Bay Ultra Premium 6 Week Wine Kit

Tiny Bubbles. A Primer on Beer Carbonation. Chris Saunders. May 1, A Primer on Beer Carbonation 1/40

Microbiologist. QA Lab at Boulevard Brewing Co. Production QA Member of A.S.B.C. Sensory Specialist, Beer Judge

Maturation of Cask Conditioned Beer

AmericanHomebrewersAssociation

A LOOK AT PRIMING, CARBONATION & CONDITIONING

Natural quality pure enjoyment

It Ain t Over til it s Over

The fermentation of glucose can be described by the following equation: C6H12O6 2 CH3CH2OH + 2 CO2 + energy glucose ethanol carbon dioxide.

Oliver Ales History. -Dark Horse: Dark Horse is a classic English dark mild ale. It is modestly bittered, light bodied, with a pleasing malt presence.

Canning and Preserving the Harvest FALL 2018

HYGIENIC MANAGEMENT OF CELLARS AND CLEANING OF BEER DISPENSE LINES

The Art of Winemaking: The Cellar

Beer Clarity SOCIETY OF BARLEY ENGINEERS 8/2/17 MIKE & LAUREN GAGGIOLI

Mad Millie Beer Kit Instructions KIT. Approx time. 1 HOUR (hands on time, ready in 4 weeks).

Debris on equipment can harbor micro-organisms that could spoil your homemade ginger beer, even with proper sanitation.

Key Elements Your Tool to Deliver Consistent Draft Beer Quality

Wine, Dry Red Recipe for 20 gallons, SteveG revised 2016-Sep-1

Sour Beer A New World approach to an Old World style. Brian Perkey Lallemand Brewing

Notes on pressure fermentation

CLEAR BEER DRAUGHT SYSTEM INSTRUCTIONS FOR USE

Grain to Glass with Eric

A Brief Comparison of Four Beer Fermentation Systems

CAMRA s. Cellarmanship. The definitive guide to storing, caring for and serving cask ale. Patrick O Neill

Practical Applications

Learn to Home Brew: A Series of Tutorials Using Mead

HEAD BREWER JOB DESCRIPTION:

Winemaking Summarized

ACETALDEHYDE High amount of fermentable sugars

Fining, Filtration and Bottling. Kay Simon & Clay Mackey, Proprietors Chinook Wines Prosser, Washington

Wood- and Barrel-Aging. Part 2: Small Barrel Handling

DRAFT TANZANIA STANDARD

FERMENTATION. By Jeff Louella

Yeast Breads. Terminology, Ingredients, & Procedures Galore!

All in One Wine Pump. Rack-Bottle-Degas-Filter

Qualifications. The Certificate in the Fundamentals of Brewing and Packaging of Beer (FBPB) Full Examination Syllabus

MR.BEER Hard Cider. You ll need the following:

Section 3 Dough Management

Honey Wheat Ale The Home Brewery All Grain Ingredient kit

Applying Brewing Better Beer

instructions 1. Connect a length of 3/8" tubing to the inlet barb of the hand pump, and secure with a LIQUID ASSEMBLY

NZQA registered unit standard version 1 Page 1 of 5

Making Hard Cider. A Guide for Small-Scale Producers. Lee Elliot Williams. Bellevue College. Technical Writing Certificate Program

Pressure Canning Wort and Yeast Starters SFHG Meeting Anchor Brewing Company April 16, 2013 Matt

Four Beers. Ludwig von Regensburg. March 16, 2012

Answering the Question

Brewculator Final Report

Beer Hardware, Systems and Delivery

YEDENT AGRO GROUP OF COMPANIES PROCESSING OF SOY BASED PRODUCTS FOR HUMAN FOODS AND POULTRY FEEDS

Seed Saving. Meg Loop

YEAST STARTERS. Brewers make wort, YEAST MAKE BEER. A few keys to turning GOOD homebrew into GREAT homebrew

MEAD! (or, why Mark keeps bees )

Fermentation Essentials

Fluid Motion, Part 8. No Strain, No Gain: suction strainer innovations

Podcast Episode CBA 006. Draft Beer vs. Bottled Beer. Welcome. Draft Beer

Chair J. De Clerck IV. Post Fermentation technologies in Special Beer productions Bottle conditioning: some side implications

Sticking and mold control. TIA Tech 2017 Los Angeles, California Steve Bright

RISK MANAGEMENT OF BEER FERMENTATION DIACETYL CONTROL

» Red wine mash flooder FD-MÜ

Bread Troubleshooting Guide

BZ35 Espresso Machine

Micro-brewing learning and training program

An Investigation of Methylsufonylmethane as a Fermentation Aid. Eryn Bottens, Jeb Z Hollabaugh, and Thomas H. Shellhammer.

Acta Chimica and Pharmaceutica Indica

Chapter 19. Learning ZoneXpress

Identifying and Avoiding Oxidation. AHA Homebrew Con 2016 Baltimore, MD

Lecture 4. Factors affecting ripening can be physiological, physical, or biotic. Fruit maturity. Temperature.

WORLD VINYARDS WINE KITS

Demand, Supply and Market Equilibrium. Lecture 4 Shahid Iqbal

Quality. Customers will walk away - 34% of consumers will go to a different outlet if quality is poor

Judging Canned Fruits and Fruit Juices

Pankaj Jain Proprietor & Founder of Relitek Services is a Highly Technical & Qualified Engineer from the field of industrial electronics.

WINE ON TAP. Draft Guide

Beer Recipe Design Brad Smith, PhD

Beer Clarity. Brad Smith, PhD

Equipment. High-Temp Equipment Brushes

Micro-brewing learning and training program

MBAA DISTRICT ST. LOUIS. Home Brewing System. Rev 1.5 3/6/2010

FRUIT RIPENING. Climacteric fruits are: *Mango *Banana *Papaya *Guava *Sapota *Kiwi *Fig *Apple *Passion fruit *Apricot *Plum *Pear

Recommended Resources: The following resources may be useful in teaching

TAPPI KRAFT RECOVERY SHORT COURSE RECAUSTICIZING CHAPTER PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE BY DALE SANCHEZ VECTOR PROCESS EQUIPMENT INC.

Operating the Rancilio Silvia after PID kit modification Version 1.1

Canning 101: Safe and Healthy Preserving. Lunch & Learn 12 noon to 1 pm June 9, 2014

COURSE FOD 3040: YEAST PRODUCTS

Gold Honey Ale Ingredients & amounts: Comments: Excelent Gold Medal Winner State Fair 2002 Pace Honey Ale 2 By Randy Pace Grain/Extract/Sugar Hops

Unit F: Harvesting Fruits and Nuts. Lesson 2: Grade, Pack, Store and Transport Fruits and Nuts

Dissolved Oxygen. Management. WineEng Experiences in Brewing and Beer. Experiences in Brewing and Beer by David Medlyn, Coopers Brewery

Introduction. Methods

Environmental Monitoring for Optimized Production in Wineries

AN OVERVIEW OF THE BREWING PROCESS. Jared Long Head Brewer Altitude Chophouse and Brewery

Transcription:

Cask Conditioning Eric Kraus twitter: lbbrewery homebrewtalk: laughingboysbrew

topics definition, history, terminology, myths fermentation conditioning priming conditioning venting serving more resources

definition CAMRA (CAMpaign for Real Ale): a natural product brewed using traditional ingredients and left to mature in the cask (container) from which it is served in the pub through a process called secondary fermentation. Oxford English Dictionary Real Ale : name for draught (or bottled) beer brewed from traditional ingredients, matured by secondary fermentation in the container from which it is dispensed, and served without the use of extraneous carbon dioxide

history casks date back to 400 BC, transporting wine/beer. clay was most popular, followed by wooden barrel (by 17th century bottles were common) today casks are more of a tradition than a necessity (with modern refrigeration, CO2, pasteurization: preservation and distribution possible) cask condition wasn't a choice as much as it was the "way it was" because there was no means of preservation with the lack of these technologies, our modern "three-tier" distribution system wasn't viable for transporting/storing beer back then almost all european pubs were brew pubs in which the beer was brewed on premises and matured/conditioned in their cellar

terminology serving mechanisms condition: the level of carbonation that resides within beer bung (keystone/shive) gravity tap cask widge venting: process of brining beer condition to that of equilibrium with atmospheric pressure/temperature cask (pin: 5gal, firkin: 10gal) finings additions used to help clarify spile (soft / hard) cask breather (aspirator valve): valve that allows only atmospheric pressure CO2 (prolongs beer life w/o add excess headpressure)

myths cask beer is flat properly conditioned cask beer has just over 1.0 vols of carbonation cask beer is warm cellars are naturally at 53-54 F, therefore much cooler than room temperature just prime in keg with sugar and use CO2 to dispense goofy might as well force carb with bottled CO2 beer left in contact with CO2 head pressure over longer period of time will become more carbonated At a constant temperature/pressure only a certain amount of CO2 will ever be absorbed in the beer

fermentation not much difference in fermentation other than ensuring there is adequate yeast available for secondary (critical) some beer will be ready for cask racking in as little as 3-5 days. secondary fermentation: three strategies depending on priming technique 1. ferment out to FG, add more sugar (like bottling) 2. rack to cask while not yet fully attenuated (1 Plato = 0.6 vols) so 2-4 above FG is = 1.2 2.4vols 3. krausening: add active fermenting beer to cask yeast: managing yeast quantity is essential too much, won't fall out and beer will be cloudy/yeasty not enough, won t carbonate the beer, will be flat (nothing can be done to fix) age beer entirely in secondary (if sits too long in primary, risk all your yeast drop out) cold crashing isn t commonly practiced finings are used as well as cellar temp

racking/priming/fining sanitation cover your bung hole racking to cask is much like bottling (no bucket required) sugar, finings, adjuncts, etc get added directly into the cask use cheese cloth bag for hops, adjuncts so they don t clog use similar amount of surgar as bottle priming slightly less sugar because less headspace (means more head pressure), also lower target condition (vols) example: I use 2-3oz dextrose boiled in 1 cup of water / 5gals finings: isinglass is a collagen from fish bladder used for clearing yeast (isinglass: + charge, yeast: - charge) *isinglass works best 2 nd or 3 rd time, and works best on rising temperature Take your cask for a walk

conditioning conditioning is managing the level of carbonation in the beer at cellar temperature (13 C or 54 F) (at atmospheric pressure), a pint of beer will hold just over a pint of CO2 (~1.1 vols) three things determine condition temperature, head pressure, time Forced carbonation in kegging is similar but is only head pressure which is why a substantial amount of pressure and time is required

conditioning flow

venting venting is the process of releasing head pressure, soft spile used based on three principles of conditioning (temp, pressure, time), releasing head pressure will cause the beer to release any extra CO2 to remain in equilibrium equilibrium takes a couple days make sure shive/spile is not clogged, remove twice/day cellarman determines beer is conditioned appropriately by activity/taste once conditioned, hard spile is used to prevent air in/co2 out should plan for minimum 2 days to vent and drop bright

example maturation schedule (my process after racking) 1 day at yeast temp to kick off secondary fermentation 3-4 days secondary at 50 F (this will over-carbonate the beer vs gas in headspace insurance) remix finings, increase temp 1-2 days to drop bright 54 F (this will release any extra CO2 to equal 1.1-1.2 vols) tap 2-3 days venting 2 checks per day once proper condition is achieved. Hard spile / connect to aspirator valve If using aspirator valve, cask life = 3 weeks. If spile, cask life = 3 days

tapping no evidence that tapping at certain time has adv/disadv overly active beer (warm with lots of head pressure) could be messy cool first, cover with towel tap for gravity pour cask widge for upright serving

cask serving gravity pour beer engine (hand pump)

cask serving hard spile will need to be removed during serving as you draw beer off, you will draw in oxygen into the cask typically, oxygen is seen as bad, but in cask beers, it actually helps mature the beer maturation is a bell curve (under oxygenated, matured, over oxygenated) with an aspirator valve, beer does not mature with each glass

additional resources Cellarmanship http://www.amazon.com/cellarmanship-patrick- ONeill/dp/1852492783 CAMRA Campaign for Real Ale http://www.camra.org.uk