Brewing Beer The Hard Way
Brewing Beer The Hard Way
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Pre Industrial Base Malt with a 20 Day Germination
Kilning and Curing Chevallier barley completely over fire for 20 hours total kiln time. For more info check out the blog: brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/
zhlédnutí: 1 460

Video

Sorghum
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 5 lety
Due to the high risk of mycotoxin formation while malting sorghum I would not recommend it unless you have access to a mycotoxin test kit. Aflatoxin and other mycotoxins can lead to serious health problems. Note this video was made in September of 2017. Check out the blog: brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/
Brumalt two ways: withered vs. high moisture
zhlédnutí 670Před 5 lety
In this video I'm making brumalt using a naturally occuring "hot couch" method where the malt is allowed to rise in temperature to 50 C 122 F on it's own. One malt is couched after drying out a little (withered) and the other malt is couched directly after germination while it still has a 40% moisture content. This comparison shows the effect that the enzymes can have on melanoidin production a...
New Improved Malt Kiln for Diastatic Brown Malt
zhlédnutí 3,2KPřed 5 lety
Improvements to the malt kiln I made 4 years ago for making diastatic brown malt. This kiln is fueled with wood pellets burned in paint-can "gassifiers" for a clean consistent burn. Good for those of us who live in town-houses. For more info on diastatic brown malt and lots of other malting info check out the blog at brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/
Garden highlights 2018
zhlédnutí 755Před 5 lety
Mashed together some footage from this season growing Maris Otter, Bere, and Chevallier Barley
Malting and brewing with Rye
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 6 lety
Making a 100% Rye beer. For more malting info check out the blog at brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/
Hulled Oat Malt Fail
zhlédnutí 2KPřed 7 lety
Still getting that grassy, green corn husk smell and flavour when malting these hulled oats. Germination rate was bad as well.brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/
Oat Malt
zhlédnutí 4,7KPřed 7 lety
Experimenting with Oats from a feed store. Trying to figure out what works best when using oats. For more in depth info: brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/
2017 Garden update
zhlédnutí 536Před 7 lety
Planting Maris Otter, Chevalier and Bere barley
Lightly toasted malt, Biscuit, Victory, and Amber
zhlédnutí 2,9KPřed 7 lety
Blog:brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/category/amber-malt/
Un-aerated steeping Part 1
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed 7 lety
Un-aerated steeping vs. aerated steeping and long germination times. Blog: brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/category/history/
Hulless barley, locally grown
zhlédnutí 1,3KPřed 7 lety
Trying out some locally grown hulless barley donated by Cedar Isle Farm. brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/ www.cedarislefarm.ca/
Debittered black patent malt made from hulled barley
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 7 lety
Making black patent malt from hulled barley. For more info check out my blog brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/
Ancient Wheat Brew
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed 7 lety
Just a silly video of my brew day today using the Emmer, Spelt and Kamut malts I made in the last video. Efficiency was around 80% Here's the last video czcams.com/video/L-yp522roTM/video.html
Malting Spelt, Emmer and Khorasan Wheat
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 7 lety
For kilning times and temperatures check out my blog:brewingbeerthehardway.wordpress.com/ Here's the brew day video czcams.com/video/iDJEK6WDdG8/video.html 1:20 Steeping 2:42 Germination Day 4 3:43 Drying Emmer 4:23 Weighing, curing the Emmer 5:17 Emmer curing temps. 5:26 Spelt Day 6, rub test 6:41 Spelt curing 7:00 Khorasan troubles 7:49 Spelt curing 8:20 New Kamut 8:52 Germination rate 9:20 D...
Alta Barley Harvest QT
zhlédnutí 2KPřed 8 lety
Alta Barley Harvest QT
Malting the whole feed bag
zhlédnutí 63KPřed 8 lety
Malting the whole feed bag
Wind Malt
zhlédnutí 1,9KPřed 8 lety
Wind Malt
Malt Kiln
zhlédnutí 13KPřed 8 lety
Malt Kiln
New plot October 2015
zhlédnutí 212Před 8 lety
New plot October 2015
Inside Gambrinus
zhlédnutí 2,1KPřed 9 lety
Inside Gambrinus
Harvest 2015 Growing 1 beer per square foot!
zhlédnutí 23KPřed 9 lety
Harvest 2015 Growing 1 beer per square foot!
Garden Update June 20 2015
zhlédnutí 297Před 9 lety
Garden Update June 20 2015
garden update
zhlédnutí 333Před 9 lety
garden update
Pale malt
zhlédnutí 11KPřed 9 lety
Pale malt
New malt kiln
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 9 lety
New malt kiln
Diastatic Brown Malt 2014
zhlédnutí 2,8KPřed 9 lety
Diastatic Brown Malt 2014
Hop Hunting 2014
zhlédnutí 799Před 9 lety
Hop Hunting 2014
Threshing device 2014
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed 10 lety
Threshing device 2014
Rat in the barley
zhlédnutí 490Před 10 lety
Rat in the barley

Komentáře

  • @seyedmortezatabatabaei6208

    hi

  • @rfox2014
    @rfox2014 Před měsícem

    Interesting stuff

  • @henryeccleston7381
    @henryeccleston7381 Před 3 měsíci

    I wonder if serious toasting on the malted oats would give you a better flavour?

  • @brandonmonroe7050
    @brandonmonroe7050 Před 4 měsíci

    Nicely done. Are these curing temps the same for barley and wheat?

  • @madchem184
    @madchem184 Před 8 měsíci

    Great content, I'm getting into home malting mainly because I want to make smoked malt the proper way. I'll give brown mal a try, it's almost impossible to get some here in Germany.

    • @JFDyment
      @JFDyment Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks madchem, most of my malts are smoked these days since I try to use my barrel kiln as much as possible, we have oak pellets here for Bar-b-queing which give a nice mellow smoke flavour.

    • @madchem184
      @madchem184 Před 8 měsíci

      @@JFDyment great to know you're still malting at home! Did you stop publishing your content? I got a pellet smoker but it's difficult to control the temperature under 70C. Why do you kiln the malt at low temperatures during the first stage? Would a higher starting temperature somehow denature the enzymes faster in the early stages compared to when the malt is almost dry? I know that dark Munich is kilned "out" at over 100C so maybe there is a different degradation of the enzymes depending on moisture content in the kernels, I just couldn't find any info about this.

  • @42069daddysgirl
    @42069daddysgirl Před 9 měsíci

    You want weird try homade gopnik kvas or beer it’s a good weird though

  • @matthewloake3401
    @matthewloake3401 Před 10 měsíci

    Awesome video. I’m sort of doing the same. Your video has made things a lot easier for me. Thank you

  • @jarosawdomanski1897
    @jarosawdomanski1897 Před 11 měsíci

    I'm sorry, but you're talking about cyanides, alkalis, picking dark grains... Listening to you on youtube, african women will probably be amazed - these americans are afraid of all this, How can they even leave the house, after all there are so many dangers on the doorstep! :))) In Black Africa, sorghum malt beer is a traditional drink prepared by housewives in every village. Look at other movies like these good women making beer for their families, they really don't bother with everything you talk about. The grain of sorghum is soaked, malted, dried in the sun, crushed, poured into warm water, often with the addition of corn flour and slowly brought to a boil. Once the liquid is drained, it is fermented. And that's it! If you often prepare such a drink, choose from the grains only the thickest rubbish, otherwise life would not be enough to play Cinderella! If we do not allow to get into it various unwanted and inevitable in a simple rural farm extras such as flies, manure and worms, then this beer is certainly more natural than those highly processed beer products of industrial civilization. And if this beer doesn't harm africans, why would it harm us? Did God make us from another clay?:)) Best regards, and I hope I didn't offend you with my post since that wasn't my goal.

  • @hansplourde
    @hansplourde Před rokem

    nice little gold mine of information this channel cheers!

  • @thomasmckenzie9726
    @thomasmckenzie9726 Před rokem

    Use an attic fan on top to suck air. Put on a variac

  • @timchapman6702
    @timchapman6702 Před rokem

    Did that not denature the enzymes when you heated it to 190 ?

    • @brandonmonroe7050
      @brandonmonroe7050 Před 5 měsíci

      Had to have. I'd stay under 125 until dry unless you're making crystal malt.

  • @Miodragy
    @Miodragy Před rokem

    It is long time ago, but you can use vitamin C to remove all chlorine from yours water. You need very small amount and reaction is instant.

  • @davidpestana5290
    @davidpestana5290 Před rokem

    hi everyone, question. Is it possible to do this with rice ? so I can make a only rice beer ?

  • @beeroquoisnation
    @beeroquoisnation Před rokem

    I also have to ask how you are carbing your beer? If you are using priming sugar, I would suggest not. I would recommend krausen carbing your oat beer. Save some wort back after boil and freeze it until after fermentation and thaw it a day or so before you pitch a little yeast to get it going, or just pitch the thawed out wort before bottling as a gyle. There is a calculator on Brewers Friend that will assist in getting the amount right. These might be great options for cleaning up flavors as they should. DISCLAIMER: I have never brewed a 100% oat beer.

  • @beeroquoisnation
    @beeroquoisnation Před rokem

    I wonder what your temperature was during germination on the second test. When we plant oats, the cold isn't as big a factor for germinating in the ground. We can pant in mid March before the ground temperature reaches 50 degrees Fahrenheit.

  • @titahibayflier3160
    @titahibayflier3160 Před rokem

    I recently tried to malt some Pearl Barley, since it was husk-less i steeped it for a much shorter time and got chitting on the first soak, i think it drowned as i didn't weigh out the grains and calculate the water content. A few grains have germinated so i presume i've just screwed up. it's much harder than one might think

    • @JFDyment
      @JFDyment Před rokem

      The problem is the pearl barley. Pearl barley has had the husk and outer layers removed and all your left with is the starchy part of the grain. I'm surprised that you got any germination. You will have a much easier time if you can find some whole grain barley

  • @user-pn1zt8dj7l
    @user-pn1zt8dj7l Před rokem

    Bake degrees Celsius? and bake How Long?

  • @dougshelton69
    @dougshelton69 Před 2 lety

    6 to 8 inches will fit..... trust me....lol

  • @Theandrew189
    @Theandrew189 Před 2 lety

    So the drill tool (Sheetrock mud mixer) with the chains are used to seperate the barley from the stalk? Is that correct? Then you just use a fan to blow the stalks away and collect the grain like that?

    • @JFDyment
      @JFDyment Před 2 lety

      Yes, that's correct. I usually fill up the bucket to about half way with the seed heads.

  • @CundaliniWantsHisHandBack

    Nice watching how you do it but it has no instructional value due to lack of explaining your steps. I stopped watching at 3:09

  • @themoralshow902
    @themoralshow902 Před 2 lety

    Thank you ❤️😃 From Sri Lanka ❤️🇱🇰

  • @JonathonPickett
    @JonathonPickett Před 2 lety

    Thank you for all your hard work and teaching. I started an un-aerated malting this morning.

  • @jeffcarey9020
    @jeffcarey9020 Před 2 lety

    This is very cool. You may consider using a dimmer switch on the fan for adjusting the air flow.

  • @oakbox12345
    @oakbox12345 Před 2 lety

    this is so awesome! well done!

  • @cameronshine3465
    @cameronshine3465 Před 2 lety

    That is a really good idea and well built too. i am going to the hardware shop tomorrow to get some plywood. Thanks again a great idea...

  • @jeffjefferson3364
    @jeffjefferson3364 Před 2 lety

    If I can grown enough barley on an acre for over 40000! Beers! I'm going to be a millionaire

  • @brisco4072
    @brisco4072 Před 2 lety

    Hi, I am just getting into this now, its nice to see others going through this process. As far as flavor, de Clerck (p.480) states that "On no account must the pitch impart any flavor to the beer." I think it is just for protection from infection as you stated. His formula is the resin you have, 10%-20% resin oil (obtained from the distilling process) and 2-5% paraffin. It should be soft at 40ºC and should melt at 55ºC.

  • @Jason-iz6ob
    @Jason-iz6ob Před 2 lety

    228 beers. What will you do for the other 11 months of the year?

  • @thornhedge9639
    @thornhedge9639 Před 3 lety

    By couching; you are referring to fermenting correct? I'm unfamiliar with the technical terms used in brewing so I have to ask, but it makes sense because that would cause the rise in temperature you witnessed.

  • @anniecrooners1021
    @anniecrooners1021 Před 3 lety

    I know this is old, but just had to say your resources have been invaluable. Being from Australia, really appreciate the metric conversions! Malting my first batch this week, has all gone to plan because of you. Cheers mate👍

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 3 lety

      Thanks Annie! Good luck with your first batch, let me know how it turns out.

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 3 lety

      Oh it's "The Annie Crooners", cool music! but how did you get our Prime Minister to sing in your band?

    • @anniecrooners1021
      @anniecrooners1021 Před 3 lety

      @@BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 thanks haha connections😉

  • @sallykalya9023
    @sallykalya9023 Před 3 lety

    But you didnt show us how it turned to liquid malt extract.Did u boil the roasted grains

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 3 lety

      I just steeped 1 ounce of crushed roasted grain with 1 cup of boiling water.

    • @sallykalya9023
      @sallykalya9023 Před 3 lety

      @@BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Thank you.Could you please tell me how this is turned into powder like in Ovaltine and Bournvita,

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 3 lety

      @@sallykalya9023 www.homebrewersassociation.org/how-to-brew/how-malt-extract-is-made/

  • @citizen_koehn
    @citizen_koehn Před 3 lety

    Do you save some seed for planting the following year? Would you save them at this stage? Or prior to harvesting for malting, while it's still green?

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 3 lety

      Yes I save the seed from the biggest and earliest heads for next year. You should harvest only when dry (golden colour)

  • @forstjorinn
    @forstjorinn Před 3 lety

    Very interesting and thanks for sharing.

  • @lucaszbiernat
    @lucaszbiernat Před 3 lety

    Hi. Can you tell me please, how did you measured moisture content in your seed? I am also looking to buy feed barley.

  • @rongreene1788
    @rongreene1788 Před 3 lety

    Wedge the oven door open with a butter knife to improve drying time. Cheers.

  • @bradshultz8385
    @bradshultz8385 Před 3 lety

    Feedbarley costing .50/lb You can buy malt for $.80

    • @tjsotos2885
      @tjsotos2885 Před 2 lety

      He mentioned he paid ($12/44lb) = $0.27 (assuming canadian $) per lb. If we assume malt is $0.80/lb, his feed barley is still a third of the cost. That being said malt is way more expensive than $0.80/lb. The cheapest malt I can find nowadays is about $1.40/lb (Briess 2-row) which would still be 2.8 times more expensive than your $0.50 feed barley.

  • @luisledesma586
    @luisledesma586 Před 3 lety

    your "otter co-op" feed barley looks nicer than my local feed store stock but I do get very good germination rate; I would'n freak either way though.

  • @jturn4646
    @jturn4646 Před 3 lety

    Brewers pitch is more than just pine resin. There is also a proprietary blend of oil and paraffin. This is described in another Pilsner Urquell documentary. They also cooked the resin at 180-200⁰ C until the pitch turned olive/brown/black I'm on the hunt for how they did it in 14th century recipes. I'm going to try adding beeswax.

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 3 lety

      Interesting, I was always curious about the colour difference.

    • @TopusCraftsman
      @TopusCraftsman Před rokem

      You need to use bees bax + resin + animal fat. 1\3\0.05

    • @jturn4646
      @jturn4646 Před rokem

      @@TopusCraftsman can you share why you use animal fat?

    • @TopusCraftsman
      @TopusCraftsman Před rokem

      @@jturn4646 you can use olive oil as well but in my region, animal fat is much easier to find because of the war. It's more my mental gup

  • @iamonky
    @iamonky Před 3 lety

    very interesting!

  • @citizen_koehn
    @citizen_koehn Před 3 lety

    late to the party by a few years, but you say you can do up to 30 lbs at a time with this setup? do you turn the malt throughout? or does the fan make that a non-issue?

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 3 lety

      Yep that's right 30 lbs and you don't have to turn it but I often do just for fun

  • @testuser902
    @testuser902 Před 3 lety

    Cool. I tried malting sorgam as well. I wanted to make African umcombiti beer. I ran into the same problems as you did. Instead of using lye I used diluted hydrogen peroxide. It is pretty harmless and very effective at killing mold spore. I only let it soak in the hydrogen peroxide for 15 min. That was not enough. I should have left it longer. I did start to get mold after 3 days. So I stopped the germination and roster them. I soured the mash for 24hrs and assed white corn flower and brewed the rest like a normal beer process. The result was ok. According to a South African friend it was very authentic tasting. But it was not something I could drink a lot of. Also I search a list for a place to buy sorgam from. Finally I found it at Ethiopian grocery store.

  • @johnfreeman7005
    @johnfreeman7005 Před 3 lety

    Kiwi john here, what you need is a old clothes dryer, i set mine to warm it holds15-20 on dry its 45- 50 on dry. A plane malt done in 2 hours and you don't have to stand watch it , job done.

  • @nawam.5688
    @nawam.5688 Před 3 lety

    Great

  • @nawam.5688
    @nawam.5688 Před 3 lety

    I am about to use it for mushroom cultivation Could you please tell us how to make light malt extract powder? Or any steps to be added to this vedio to achieve that? Thanks alot

  • @dsnooz
    @dsnooz Před 3 lety

    The black, floating kernels are ergot

  • @mrstratau6513
    @mrstratau6513 Před 3 lety

    Nice.

  • @Afrikaislife
    @Afrikaislife Před 4 lety

    We've been drinking sorghum for centuries.

  • @johnauld1268
    @johnauld1268 Před 4 lety

    I can't find Briess Special Roasted Malt in the UK. Have you made anything like that?

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 4 lety

      I'll have to give it a try, from their description of "sourdough/tangy" my guess would be that it spends some time in the 40-50C range while green before bringing the temperatures up to dry it and toast it. Just a guess.

  • @TheDuckofDoom.
    @TheDuckofDoom. Před 4 lety

    For my last batch I super-aerated the steep with about 100ppm hydrogen peroxide, which is also enough to act as a sanitizer and substantially reduce microbial growth, though h2o2 has a very short half-life under these sort of conditions (like 12hours) the decomposition products are water and oxygen. I did notice a distinct lacto-yogurt smell (maybe a touch of vinegar) a day or two after chitting but I didn't taste any noticeable sourness and the smell subsided by the time I was ready to wither it. I was also using a fairly high moisture target adding water throughout germination.

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Před 4 lety

      100ppm is about 3.3ml(3/4 teaspoon) of 3% peroxide per liter of water, or 2.5 teaspoons per gallon, 1/4 cup per 5gallons. 25ppm is actually enough to treat reasonably clean water for drinking(given enough standing time), I just used 100ppm because all the organic matter(pounds of barley) and the chlorine in my city water tends to neutralize some of the h2o2 right away. Also H2O2 is good for removing chlorine and chloramines.(though I forget if it is a reduction or oxidation reaction, which will be determined by acid or basic pH) Ascorbic acid or sodium thiosulfate(cheap, sold for film photography, and several other uses) are also good at dechlorination.

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 4 lety

      @@TheDuckofDoom. Interesting, thanks wolfedog99!

  • @TheDuckofDoom.
    @TheDuckofDoom. Před 4 lety

    So would you say for a similar amber color, the low and slow roast gives a more sweet and malty roasted sort of flavor while hot and fast gives more of a toasted dry flavor? Might try 275f and 325f, there is a big change in the rate of caramelizing around 300f (not specific to malt, just general cooking science) 250f is really at the bottom of the range and 350f is just hot enough to cause reactions all the way up to carbonizing.(The only reason to go higher than 350f is for reasonable speed when going very dark or quickly toasting the surface without over cooking the insides.) At 250f I would guess most color is from mailard reactions or oxidization and very little from caramel.

    • @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1
      @BrewingBeerTheHardWay1 Před 4 lety

      I wouldn't say sweeter at lower temps but more toasty and bitter at higher temps for sure.