Sunday, July 3, 2011

A Galaxy of Diamonds

After a decade of saying I wouldn't get married I finally came around to the idea and the thought of supplying beer to my own wedding had nothing to do with it at all! So to celebrate the fact that we made it this far I decided, as most normal people would, to brew a celebratory beverage. Since Galaxy hops have been so good to me ( see award winning beer post), and the fact that they are in the only home brewed beer Jenny will drink I decided they would be the back drop for a pale ale containing 4 flavour and aroma hops all from the southern hemisphere. The name is a play on the diamond I got Jenny, the fact that all these hops are gems all on their own and the idea that if I told Jenny there is Galaxy hops in it she may drink it!

The hops I had in mind were:
Galaxy
Nelson Sauvin
Citra
Rakau


The crushed grain

Filling my only free fermenter





















After a little time in secondary I kegged the beer and now she is sitting pretty in the kegerator in my shed.

Beer review to follow soon if the GBBF doesn't kill me first....

Here is the recipe.

A Galaxy of Diamonds 4 hops beer
10-A American Pale Ale
Author: rossa
Date: 03/07/2011

Size: 25 L


Original Gravity: 1.051 (1.045 - 1.060)
Terminal Gravity: 1.013 (1.010 - 1.015)
Color: 11.43 (5.0 - 14.0)
Alcohol: 5.03% (4.5% - 6.2%)
Bitterness: 61.7 (30.0 - 45.0)

Ingredients:
3 kg Maris Otter Pale Ale Malt
2 kg Munich TYPE I
.500 kg Carapils®/Carafoam®
.200 kg Crystal 55
1.0 tsp 5.2 pH Stabilizer - added during mash
1.0 tsp Protofloc - added during boil, boiled 15 min
20 g Magnum-PLMG (12.6%) - added during boil, boiled 60 min
20 g Galaxy (13.7%) - added during boil, boiled 10 min
20 g Nelson Sauvin (14.0%) - added during boil, boiled 10 min
28.0 g Rakau (12.0%) - added during boil, boiled 5 min
20 g Citra (13.8%) - added during boil, boiled 5.0 min

Yeast : Fermentis Safale US-05


Notes
5g gypsum, 2 table salt, 8 epsom salts for boil
mash @66 for 60 mins.


Saturday, July 2, 2011

Losing the plot year 2

Purple Early First weeny Carrots




July has arrived and with a much more relaxed attitude to planting than last year my efforts have started to produce some early veg. Last year it was all consuming but with the harsh winter, and all the beds completed last year, I was not in as much of a rush to get going. I felt the spring was too cold to risk planting out anything early and the schoolboy errors of last year had thought me that patience is the key.




Little Gem Onion bed



Too much Garlic


I got a present of Vegetables For the Irish Garden by Klaus Laitenberger and although I have other allotment focused books the majority are British based and the climate is too different to ours to rely on these for planting times. Klaus has set my mind at ease with regards when to sow and plant out in Ireland. He also has some interesting views on weeding which I also have taken on board. All this leads to a more relaxed experience as there is a bit more harmony to the plot.


So instead of going completely bananas with too many varieties of vegetables I instead went bananas with the volume of less. I planted around 60 garlic bulbs of 3 varieties, 3lbs of onions with again 3 varieties, 2 types of peas, 3 types of beans, 3 varieties of potato, 2 varieties of beetroot, 2 varieties of leek, 3 varieties of carrot not to mention the lettuce, courgettes and broccoli.



I'll have a Pea please Bob


The second year has brought it's own problems and my laid back approach is in danger of backfiring rather dramatically. During the winter snow a drift formed at the corner of our field and deer got in and did a fair amount of damage, eating foliage and trampling winter crops. Not much can be done about that but the summer has arrived now and so too the local rabbit population. Not seen last year, the rabbits seem to be causing havoc. They milled my lettuce and broccoli seedlings so I had to go back to basics and put down the netting.



Rabbit defence


The next month will be something to look forward to with the early veg and fruit tantalisingly close to harvesting time.



Let the harvest begin.