Archive

Archive for the ‘Homebrew Clubs’ Category

one of my favorite RCB pics

December 28th, 2009

This was taken at John Tipton’s house a couple years ago, and the pic has been on my fridge out in the garage getting wet and warped. Here’s a scan before it gets too messed up. From left to right is Vern Wolfe’s belly (Vern owned a small vineyard in California, is BJCP certified and is Alabama’s best meadmaker), Todd Swearingen (my sensei, but the student has become the masta), Adam Arnett (badass Marine Major.. don’t mess with him), John Doe (Brant doesn’t want the ABC Board to know that he is associated with law breakers, and since they are monitoring this website, I won’t provide his last name… It is definitely not Warren), me, and Scott Oberman (featured in the L.A. Times for his blatant Alabama law breaking).

Author: John Little Categories: Homebrew Clubs, brewers Tags:

Brewing Program Results

December 9th, 2009

bjcpI continue to very slowly move stuff over from my old blog at resipsaloquitur.auburnbrewclub.org. I just don’t spend as much time behind the computer nowadays. I don’t think I’ll be entering any more homebrew competitions, but I didn’t want to lose this info in the shuffle cuz it took me a long time to put it together over a few years time. I’m sure I missed a few and might update them if I ever spend the time looking through my files.

Two of these were my favorite: (i) a Cranberry Kolsch at the 2005 Music City Brewoff. This was my first ever award, and Priscilla and I drove straight home from Nashville to show the kids, then the next morning to my grandparents’ house in Athens, Ala. to show them.. I was so happy to have gotten a ribbon at all, and a blue one at that! Thanks to Todd Swearingen and John Tipton for their advice on that one, and (ii) a Best of Show American Barleywine at the Blue Ridge Brew Off in North Carolina in 2006. I remember Tom Meier on the phone with someone from BRBO at an RCB Big Brew announcing the results to us… I just couldn’t believe him when he said it.. I kept thinking the phone line was dead and he was messing with us.. it was surreal when it dawned on me he wasn’t kidding.. I jumped in the air.

Brewing through the BJCP and entering everything in multiple comps was alot of work (frustrating at times), alot of fun, and very educational. If you’re a homebrewer, you should give it a try!

*****************************************************

res ipsa loquitur (rayz ip-sah loh-quit-her)
n. Latin for “the thing speaks for itself”

Listed below are beers I’ve brewed that have received at least a 30 in BJCP sanctioned competitions. I’ve made it a long term goal to get at least a 30 for every BJCP style, indicating that the beer was “Very Good (Generally within style parameters, some minor flaws).” This is also in pursuit of completing the Brewing Program for Mastering World Beer Styles. Of course, I always hope they score even better, with a score of 38-44 indicating the beer was “Excellent (Exemplifies style well, requires minor fine-tuning)” and a score of 45-50 indicating the beer was “Outstanding (World-class example of style).”

I hope to eventually post all the recipes of the beers that have done well.
Read more…

my old about me page

September 18th, 2009

posting this left over from resipsaloquitur.auburnbrewclub.org… just posting this because I don’t want to lose it. I’ll update the links sometime and do a new About page.

**** Last update June 2008

I love homebrewing. It is my only hobby, and I find that piddling around in the brewery, sitting in the recliner flipping back and forth between homebrewing books, planning my next brews or equipment tweaks are some of the only things that really take me away from work at the end of the day.

First Craft Beers
I was first introduced to craft beer in 2003 by a friend who lives in Memphis. He and I were hooked on the MMORPG game, Star Wars Galaxies, and used to talk to each other with headsets and microphones while playing. He’d always tell me what beer he was drinking, and it was always a good gourmet beer. He introduced me to ratebeer.com, which lists thousands of beers and allows users to rate and comment on the beers. I decided to give good beer a try and went to the Whip Inn in Austin, which carries about 400 different brands of beer, and began to pull singles off the shelf. I didn’t know what I was buying, I just wanted to get a variety of things. Each night, I’d get a few out of the fridge and look them up on ratebeer.com to learn what exactly it was I was drinking. I don’t think I would’ve ever been able to discern choclate, plum, banana, raisen, biscuity, fruity, citrusy, nutty, toffee or any other flavors without the power of suggestion I found on that site. I was immediately hooked. Later my friend kept talking to me about his interest in homebrewing. I was ambivalent at first but kept the idea in the back of my head. We joked about creating Star Wars themed beers and cool labels… Lokian Wild Wheat Ale, for example. And just to clarify, I’m not a Star Wars nerd, but the game was fun for a while after it first came out.

First Homebrew
I attended my first homebrew club meeting in 2004, that of the Louisville Area Grain and Extract Research Society (LAGERS). It was incredible. I loved the homebrew, and it wasn’t long before I went to the local homebrew shop and bought my first brewing equipment. (I still use some of this equipment, but my brewery has come a long way since then.) One of the guys in the homebrew club invited me to come over to his house for a brewday on a weekend soon afterward, and I brewed my first batch, an extract batch with steeped specialty grains. After bottling that batch, I just stored it away for a while, and around this time we relocated to Alabama for work reasons.

Rocket City Brewers
Right away, I discovered the Rocket City Brewers in Huntsville, a very active club with over 40 active homebrewers. The club has won Mid-South Homebrew Club of the Year several times. I began to attend their monthly meetings and received an amazing education at each meeting. Their format of tasting one homebrew at a time, with extensive discussion of each, including a discussion of the BJCP style guidelines where appropriate was very valuable to me over the next 2 years. I immediately upgraded to all grain brewing and have brewed somewhere in the neighborhood of 83 different beer, mead and cider styles (as of June, 2008). My original goal was to not brew the same style twice and to make my way through the BJCP styles until I had brewed them all, but I fell off the wagon somewhere around batch #77. Each new style has been a real educational experience for me. Some of them have accidentally turned out quite good too!! I got involved in entering the Mid-South Homebrew Series competitions, together with the other RCB brewers, and have managed to get lucky and win a few ribbons. The competitions have been exciting and have encouraged me to brew more often and to brew different styles.

Auburn Brew Club
I moved to Auburn in May, 2007. There wasn’t a homebrew club here; and, after asking around, I wasn’t having any luck getting any names. I was beginning to get worried, because there’s nothing like getting together regularly with good hombrewing friends. So I put up a website, registered the club with the AHA, and posted messages about the club on the brewboard, beeradvocate, morebeer and northernbrewer. That helped tremedously. The club has 20 active brewers so far (as of June, 2008) and another 60 or so on our announcement list. We hope to have 30 active brewers by the end of the 2008. I commute to Montgomery for work, and I’ve been listening to podcasts from the Brewing Network and Basic Brewing on the way to and from, which has been very rewarding and makes the drive not only tolerable, but enjoyable.

Brewing and Work
Since 1992, I’ve worked exclusively on healthcare and public health issues. My online resume is here. I became licensed as an attorney in 1997 while pursuing a Master of Science in Public Health and have primarily worked for hospitals, physicians, residential care facilities, medical equipment companies and the like. Over the past few years, because of my involvement in the brewing community, I’ve had plenty of opportunities to answer questions from homebrewers and commercial brewers and retailers. I’ve always tried to maintain a focus on healthcare and public health issues, and I don’t think my forays into alcohol manufacture and serving issues takes me away from my focus. These are public health issues after all. So it has been a real pleasure to answer questions from beer brewers, consumers and sellers. There’s nothing like being able to combine work and the issues you get most excited about.

My Memphis friend never followed through with his interest in hombrewing, but I picked it up and ran with it. It has been a blast!! Thanks, Dany!

The Auburn Brew Club’s famous logo

April 7th, 2009

Priscilla, Julie and I were talking to a couple of very hot waitresses a while back at the Mellow Mushroom, Paige and Abbey. I promised a pic of the Auburn Brew Club thong, but can’t find it on the site. I must’ve only published it on the listserv we used to have.

So I found all the pics I took when these tshirts and thongs first came in. Enjoy.

wehavethechicken.com

January 14th, 2009

wehavethechicken.com.

The chicken will never be the same and will never be safe again. Don’t shoot the messenger!

the chicken city chicken

2007 Mid-South Club, Homebrewer & Master Brewer of the Year

October 15th, 2007

Antioch Sud SuckersI’ve been responsible for compiling the Mid-South stats this year, and I still have a ways to go before wrapping them up for the entire year. However, I wanted to say congratulations to Tom for an amazing accomplishment. Tom score more points this year on his own that the entire Music City Brewers Club score together.

Tom Meier individually – 157
all of the Music City Brewers combined – 153

Way to go Tom!

Author: John Little Categories: Competitions, Homebrew Clubs Tags:

Taking a break from the Mid-South Homebrew Series

July 23rd, 2007

No ChickensThe No Chicken Symbol is a friendly jab at RCB’s arch-nemesis, the Chicken City Ale Raisers. :)

Well, it is half way through the 2007 Mid-South Homebrew Series, and I’ve decided to take a break.  Tom Meier and I have been neck and neck since the beginning of the year, but he has been building a nuclear arsenal of excellent brews this summer, and I’m sure he would have blown me away.  But I still would have given him a run for his money if not for my move to Auburn.  The new job and the move kindof threw my brewing schedule and process into the wind.

The new location is a big factor.  I’ve really been struggling to adjust to the water here so I don’t end up with chlorophenols (Chlorine ruined one of my first of two batches here).  Also, I’ve been slowly making some adjustments to my setup (which is in a basement now rather than a garage), and it will take me a while to get the system like I want it.  What I hope to get to is using an Electric HLT and pumping up to the mash tuns, using gravity to run off into the boil kettles, and then rolling the boil kettles outside to boil with propane fueled flames.  So, I’ve been converting a couple of 15 gallon ice cube coolers into mash tuns and have identified a few welders in town that I may be able to take my kettles to for some modifications and to build the rolling stands.  In the end, my goal is to be able to have 4 batches going at the same time.  That’s 8 batches in a weekend and potentially 16 a month.  Beat that Tom!!! :)   Of course, that means I’ve got some storage and bottling issues to take into account too.

Also, since I’ve made some new homebrewing friends here in Auburn, it was easy for me to decide to start pulling some of the bottles from my competition stockpile to share with friends, instead of sending them off.  Once I’m re-established, I think I’ll start brewing with an eye on next year’s national competition in Cincinatti.

Author: John Little Categories: Competitions, Homebrew Clubs Tags:

my first homebrewery

December 31st, 2004

At the urging of my good friend Dany in Memphis and after having a great time at the December meeting of the LAGERS Club here in Louisville, I’ve purchased the parts I need for a home brewery.

homebrew

Here’s what I’m starting with (initial cost of around $380 for the hardware, the book, and the ingredients for my first 5 gallon batch):
-> 34 quart stainless steel brew pot with outdoor propane burner (I already had an old propane tank)
-> pump syphon
-> hydrometer
-> thermometer
-> 2x 6 1/2 glass carboys with temperature strips and fermentation locks
-> Muslin boiling bag
-> Counter Flow Wort Chiller
-> 3x cases of 22 oz. bottles (and a package of 144 bottle caps)
-> Bench Capper
-> The New Complete Joy of Homebrewing, 3rd edition (by Charlie Papazian)

There’s a few other items having to do with the bottling process that I’ll get in a few weeks after the first batch ferments and is ready to bottle.

india pale ale ingredients

And here’s the ingredients for my first 5 gallon batch of India Pale Ale:
-> 5 1/2 lbs. amber plain dried malt
-> 1 lb. crystal malt
-> 1/2 lb. malted barley for toasting
-> 2 tsp. gypsum
-> 2 oz. Northern Brewer hops (boiling)
-> 3/4 oz. Cascade hops (finishing)
-> American ale yeast
-> 1 1/4 cup dried malt extract (for bottling)

LAGERS Club 2004 Christmas meeting

December 22nd, 2004

Dany’s been trying to get me into homebrewing for over a year. I’ve been thinking I’m ready to give it a try. Last week I found a brochure published by the Louisville Area Grain and Extract Research Society (aka the LAGERS Homebrew Club). I decided at the last minute to check out their December meeting, and I had a blast.

LAGERS Club Christmas 2004

Approximately 50 people showed up, and almost everyone brought different kinds of beer. Some (including myself) brought commercial porters, lagers and holiday ales. Many brought growlers and Cornelius kegs with homebrew they’d been working on.

Everyone was very nice, and several people engaged me in conversation and offered very valuable advice on getting started with homebrewing. One gentleman loaned me The New Complete Joy of Home Brewing, ,which I’ve been reading. Now I’m very excited about it and definatelyu want to give it a try!!

Pic taken via phonecam.

Author: John Little Categories: Homebrew Clubs Tags: , ,