1st Quarter Brew 2023

Next Saturday is the day, after 1.5 years it is time to brew again!
Let's GO!!!!!!

Bunyip Yippee! American Pale Ale
Partial Mash
Batch Volume: 21 L Boil Time: 60 min Mash Water: 10.62 L
Sparge Water: 15.29 L Total Water: 25.91 L
Boil Volume: 25.92 L Pre-Boil Gravity: 1.042
Original Gravity: 1.047 Final Gravity: 1.009
IBU (Tinseth): 43 BU/GU: 0.92 Color: 10.5 SRM

Mash Temperature — 66 °C — 60 min Mash Out — 77 °C — 10 min

Malts (1.289 kg)
454 g (14%) — Briess Brewers Malt 2-Row — Grain — 1.9 °L — Mash — 60 min
454 g (14%) — Weyermann Munich II — Grain — 9.2 °L — Mash — 60 min
222 g (6.9%) — Simpsons Crystal Dark — Grain — 100.8 °L — Mash — 60 min
159 g (4.9%) — Briess Carapils — Grain — 1.7 °L — Mash — 60 min

Other (1.956 kg)
1.59 kg (49%) — Briess Golden Light — Dry Extract — 3.5 °L — Boil — 60 min
366 g (11.3%) — Briess Wheat Bavarian — Dry Extract — 6.5 °L — Boil — 60 min


Hops (182.6 g)
14.6 g (24 IBU) — Magnum 13.3% — Boil — 60 min
28 g (6 IBU) — Citra 13.2% — Aroma — 20 min hopstand
28 g (6 IBU) — Mosaic 12.1% — Aroma — 20 min hopstand
28 g (7 IBU) — Simcoe 13.6% — Aroma — 20 min hopstand
28 g — Citra 13.2% — Dry Hop — day 7
28 g — Mosaic 12.1% — Dry Hop — day 7
28 g — Simcoe 13.6% — Dry Hop — day 7

Yeast
1 pkg — Fermentis US-05 Safale American 81%

Fermentation
Primary — 18.9 °C — 14 days
 
Decided to tap it this morning after brewing. Great mix of citrus and floral aroma... not too overpowering though.

I missed the numbers a bit because I've changed my mash setup (went from a SS braided tube to a brew bag)... efficiency went from 65% to 80%, so this baby is packing a little more ABV than planned.

Thanks for the recipe @Trialben!

View attachment 24018
That looks interesting, with a great head. Hope it drinks as good as it looks.
 
Next Saturday is the day, after 1.5 years it is time to brew again!
Let's GO!!!!!!

Bunyip Yippee! American Pale Ale
Partial Mash
Batch Volume: 21 L Boil Time: 60 min Mash Water: 10.62 L
Sparge Water: 15.29 L Total Water: 25.91 L
Boil Volume: 25.92 L Pre-Boil Gravity: 1.042
Original Gravity: 1.047 Final Gravity: 1.009
IBU (Tinseth): 43 BU/GU: 0.92 Color: 10.5 SRM

Mash Temperature — 66 °C — 60 min Mash Out — 77 °C — 10 min

Malts (1.289 kg)
454 g (14%) — Briess Brewers Malt 2-Row — Grain — 1.9 °L — Mash — 60 min
454 g (14%) — Weyermann Munich II — Grain — 9.2 °L — Mash — 60 min
222 g (6.9%) — Simpsons Crystal Dark — Grain — 100.8 °L — Mash — 60 min
159 g (4.9%) — Briess Carapils — Grain — 1.7 °L — Mash — 60 min

Other (1.956 kg)
1.59 kg (49%) — Briess Golden Light — Dry Extract — 3.5 °L — Boil — 60 min
366 g (11.3%) — Briess Wheat Bavarian — Dry Extract — 6.5 °L — Boil — 60 min


Hops (182.6 g)
14.6 g (24 IBU) — Magnum 13.3% — Boil — 60 min
28 g (6 IBU) — Citra 13.2% — Aroma — 20 min hopstand
28 g (6 IBU) — Mosaic 12.1% — Aroma — 20 min hopstand
28 g (7 IBU) — Simcoe 13.6% — Aroma — 20 min hopstand
28 g — Citra 13.2% — Dry Hop — day 7
28 g — Mosaic 12.1% — Dry Hop — day 7
28 g — Simcoe 13.6% — Dry Hop — day 7

Yeast
1 pkg — Fermentis US-05 Safale American 81%

Fermentation
Primary — 18.9 °C — 14 days
Wow, 6.5 ounces of hops Craig! Good thing you’re not using tomatoes, that would be mighty expensive.
 
Wow! This is really good! @Trialben , this is your recipe? I really like this. Very well balanced, bitter doesn't overpower the malt. Mosaic had always been a favorite, so this hits the spot

Definitely on my list to do again
20230129_160228.jpg
 
Wow! This is really good! @Trialben , this is your recipe? I really like this. Very well balanced, bitter doesn't overpower the malt. Mosaic had always been a favorite, so this hits the spot

Definitely on my list to do again
View attachment 24036
Ah glad you like it man.
Yes the culmination of many inebriated imaginations of what I'm looking for in a pale ale.

I honestly think it's a hard style to get right.

I'm glad you like the ballance of the malt and bitterness this is what this beer is all about.

Cheers!
 
@Trialben what is the origin for this beer name?

I agree, pale ale has such a wide definition. Like asking if you like a car

This is from the internet!

What is a bunyip in Australia?

Bunyip. According to legend, a man-eating monster called the bunyip once lived in the rivers, lakes and swamps of Australia. Its howl carried through the night air, making people afraid to enter the water. At night, the bunyip prowled the land, hunting for women and children to eat.
 
This is from the internet!

What is a bunyip in Australia?

Bunyip. According to legend, a man-eating monster called the bunyip once lived in the rivers, lakes and swamps of Australia. Its howl carried through the night air, making people afraid to enter the water. At night, the bunyip prowled the land, hunting for women and children to eat.
Nice! So it's an Australian sasquatch
 
Nice! So it's an Australian sasquatch
Yeah something like that Aboriginal in Origin.
We also have the Yowie this is more inline with the American sasquatch I believe.
It haunts the hills in the forests up behind me.
Since the bunyip is a swamp/billabong creature maybe it's more inline with nessie from Scotland or more of a hybrid :D

Bunyip https://g.co/kgs/swRkRL
 
Since I now live in the Pacific Northwest, the land of Sasquatch, I need to work that into a beer name. But what style would be best suited to carry such a moniker? I usually tend to brew APA’s and IPA’s, but I’m open to ideas.
 
Since I now live in the Pacific Northwest, the land of Sasquatch, I need to work that into a beer name. But what style would be best suited to carry such a moniker? I usually tend to brew APA’s and IPA’s, but I’m open to ideas.
Sasquatch has to be strong and mysterious. English strong ale?
 
Since I now live in the Pacific Northwest, the land of Sasquatch, I need to work that into a beer name. But what style would be best suited to carry such a moniker? I usually tend to brew APA’s and IPA’s, but I’m open to ideas.
Careful, Sierra Nevada already makes a Bigfoot Barleywine.

How about a Sasquatch Imperial Stout!
Folk-Tale Ale
Wild Man Saison (or Sour, if you’re feeling spirited)

If you do brew the beer, make sure to take some ambiguous photo of it! :p
 
Since I now live in the Pacific Northwest, the land of Sasquatch, I need to work that into a beer name. But what style would be best suited to carry such a moniker? I usually tend to brew APA’s and IPA’s, but I’m open to ideas.
An imperial hazy IPA: Blurry Photo.
Hazy for blurry, but why imperial? Big foot, big beer.
 
Maybe a wheat wine something that looks tame but deceiving at the same time oh Belgian quad.
 

Back
Top