The Brewed Palate In The Kitchen Ep. 3: Beer Braised Lamb Shanks

Alongside my passion for brewing beers with complex flavor profiles comes my love for using craft beer in order to enhance the depth of the dishes that I enjoy cooking. One of those dishes is lamb, a meat that over time I’ve come to realize pairs really well with Belgian beers. So when my mom gave me a package of lamb shanks because she had “no idea how to cook them”, I decided to braise them in Brewery Ommegang’s Three Philosophers, a quadrupel w/ cherry (Kriek) ale added and add a couple of herbs (rosemary and bay leaves) to my usual lamb seasoning to accent the beer. As in episodes 1 & 2 of The Brewed Palate In The Kitchen, the above video includes both my step by step preparation of this dish and more about how I put together the recipe for it.

Beer Braised Lamb Shanks:

Ingredients:

  • 2 lamb stanks
  • 22oz Belgian Quadrupel
  • 4 stalks Celery
  • 4 large Carrots
  • 1 large Yellow onion
  • 4-5 cloves Garlic
  • 2-3 Portobello mushrooms
  • 1.25 tsp Cumin
  • 2 Bay leaves (can get away with using 1)
  • 2 tsp Paprika
  • 1/3 cup Demerara
  • 1/2 sprig Rosemary
  • 2 cups Chick Broth
  • Salt & Pepper to taste
  • 1/2 cup All purpose flour

As noted above, please watch the above video for step by step instructions on how to prepare this dish.

Cheers!

 

 

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Charlie Papazian @ Bitter & Esters Part 2: Homebrew Swap Q&A

10733719_891600054192193_5584874814975917766_oAfter interviewing Charlie he went out for a dinner interview with Ale Street News founder and editor Tony Forder and I stayed at Bitter and Esters waiting for the evening’s homebrew swap to begin at 6pm. Then at around 7, Charlie returned to a packed shop bustling with homebrewers sharing their recent zymurgical creations. Bitter and Esters owner John LaPolla asked him if he’d like to speak before or after trying a few home-brews and he replied that he’d speak first. So everyone gathered around the tables at the back of the shop and payed close attention to the words of the “godfather of American homebrewing and craft beer.”

Once Charlie finished his informative and entertaining introductory words he welcomed questions from the crowd and answered them with him both useful information and stories of past experiences which left everyone laughing and full of homebrewing pride. In turn, part two includes my footage of  Charlie’s words to the crowd (intro. and Q&A) along with him choosing the winner of the swap (explained in the video and below).

Overall, meeting and spending some quality time with Charlie was an experience that I’ll never forget. He is a true gentleman and exudes a contagious sense of pride in spreading the messages of homebrewing that all craft and homebrewers can relate to and internalize. If you haven’t had the opportunity to meet him in person his books, The Complete Joy of Homebrewing and The Home Brewer’s Companion are a great way to get to know his approach to homebrewing and instill a sense of fun into your homebrewing experiences (both of them are available for $17.99 at Bitter and Esters). Lastly, while I knew of Charlie’s slogan “Relax don’t worry have a homebrew” before this event, after interviewing and sharing beers with him I can honestly say that following it can help any one who has chosen to brew their own beer become a better brewer by heading its meaning (discussed in parts 1 and 2).

For more footage from this event including the history of “Relax don’t worry have a homebrew” and Pie Day check out the Bitter & Esters blog post about this event.

Topics discussed and Questions asked in the above video:

  • How many beers Charlie will have brewed by the end of 2014? Keeping things simple to be able to brew often.
  • Homebrewing hint: Sealing bottles will paraffin or sealing wax to protect beers that you’re aging (homebrew and craft) from oxidization.
  • History of The Home Brewer’s Companion.
  • What’s in Charlie’s fermenters now? – Story of his Barkshack Ginger Mead
  • Things that have shocked him about yeast and hops over the years: being able to culture and then ferment beers with yeast from a 24 year old bottle of homebrew.
  • Story of the Cry Havoc yeast strain (WLP 862) – How Charlie obtained his original vial of it and where the strain originated from.
  • “Knowledge is great, but you have to go with your experience/s”
  • Hop descriptors in Charlie’s books are from his experiences brewing with them and not just rubbing hops in his hands and trying to pick out aromas.
  • Has Charlie ever thought of opening his own brewery?
  • Using cinnamon in the mash to prevent precursors of hot side aeration and stabilize beer quality. Coriander’s ability to preserve beer.
  • What’s the worst homebrew disaster that you (Charlie) have experienced recently?
  • Charlie picks the winner from the 4 homebrew swap crowd chosen beers.
  • A few pictures from the event.

Cheers and Keep on brewing!

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TBP Presents: Charlie Papazian @ Bitter and Esters (Part One-Interview)

IMG_3382On Wednesday, October 29, 2014 I headed down to Bitter & Esters  to interview and then hang out with the one and only Charlie Papazian, one of my and many brewers’ (home and craft alike) biggest role models. Since founding the American Homebrewers Association in 1978, he has been credited with being a pioneer of both the homebrewing and craft beer movements in the US. One way in which he has helped spread the messages and craft of brewing beer at home has been through his books, The Complete Joy of Homebrewing and The Home Brewer’s Companion. As such, in part one of this two part video series I sit down with Charlie to discuss his recently released revised editions of the aforementioned books along with various other topics related to getting the most out of your homebrewing experiences….So as Charlie says “Relax, don’t worry, have a homebrew” and enjoy this interview video and, or podcast.

Charlie Papazian @ Bitter and Esters (Part One-Interview): Questions asked / Topics Discussed:

(you / your = Charlie)

  1. Welcoming Charlie to New York City: What’s it like for you to be visiting NYC and getting a picture of its craft beer and homebrewing scene?
  2. What in your opinion characterizes the American homebrewer nowadays?
  3. American craft beer and homebrewing’s influence throughout the world and implications of the growth taking place in many countries around the world through homebrewing and subsequently craft beer.
  4. The American Homebrewers Association  was founded by Charlie in 1978 with the goal of teaching homebrewing classes and creating a community around brewing shares its offices with the Brewers Association. In turn, creating opportunities for collaboration and community and industry growth. “Homebrewers are the pioneers.”
  5. Now that the 4th edition of The Complete Joy of Homebrewing has been released. How have you been able to track the growth of homebrewing through the influence and sales of your book?… Insight into beer culture through the names that he has given to his recipes and the names that craft brewers and home brewers have given to their beers since The Complete Joy of Homebrewing was first released.
  6. Should every craft beer enthusiast homebrew?
  7. Using The Complete Joy of Homebrewing to help you remain relaxed as you start to homebrew and or get in to the more involved in the more advanced processes of homebrewing….Benefits of reading the new edition from the start even if you’ve read previous editions.
  8. Process that Charlie followed in order to revise The Complete Joy of Homebrewing and The Home Brewer’s Companion.
  9. When you sit down and actually have time to brew how do you formulate a beer recipe? Recreating beers that he’s tried during his travels and using new ingredients to brew creative beers e.g. the American brown ale recipe that he created for Bitter & Esters.
  10. Focusing on mastering the core processes of brewing that help one have the ability to get creative in his or her brewing before worrying about using methods that will only make minor differences to one’s beers.
  11. Charlie’s concluding piece of advice for those who have purchased and or read his books and are looking to get more into homebrewing.
  12. Cheers and good luck wishes.

Stay tuned for Part Two, Q & A etc w/ Charlie at Bitter and Esters’ bottle swap…

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Homebrew Wednesday 42: “Taking My Pils”

HBW 42 des.001For this week’s Homebrew Wednesday I start off with a tasting of my Lion’s Roar pilsner (hence the title), giving you a detailed analysis of all aspects of the beer. I then announce the winner of my 300 subscriber contest aka Corey, The Iowa Carver and introduce the rough details about another contest that I’ll be running where the prize will be autographed copies of Charlie Papazian’s latest books (The Complete Joy of Homebrewing, 4th Edition and The Homebrewer’s Companion, 2nd Edition AND John Palmer’s Water book. Then for the second half of this week’s episode I show you some footage of me using “the poor man’s beer gun” to counter pressure fill both a 22oz and a 12oz bottle from one of my kegs. I hope that the demonstration is useful to all those who keg their beers.

Upcoming Videos:

  • Charlie Papazian – Interview and Q & A @ Bitter and Esters
  • The Brewed Palate In The Kitchen Episode 3: Beer Braised Lamb Shanks.
  • The Inn Keeper Dark Saison Brew Day
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HBW 41: Ah!!! This is the homebrewer’s life.

If you’re a home brewer you know that homebrewing and craft beer tend to permeate and enhance other areas of your life all while helping you explore your inner creativity. As such, for this week’s Homebrew Wednesday I share footage from my HIBC Barleywine 2014 brew day (recipe below), finishing gluing the beer caps onto my keezer lid, and a preview of an upcoming episode of The Brewed Palate In The Kitchen i.e. how I’m currently expressing my inner creativity through my passion for homebrewing and craft beer. Cheers!

Episode Breakdown:

  1. Holy Inn Brewing Company Barleywine 2014 brew day footage

A. Adjust mash ph for better starch / sugar conversions: I added Calcium Chloride to lower my mash ph. After getting confused by John Palmer’s water calculator I ended up just adding in a tsp at a time until my ph was 5.34. Because ph is most accurate at room temperature I used this online ph corrector to find out the actual ph.

B. Discussion about my yeast starter and footage of my hop additions.

C. We have lift off! i.e. an update on the start of fermentation.

2. Adding the last 8 caps to my keezer lid

A. Using Gorilla super glue to secure the caps to the lid.

B. Plans for pouring clear epoxy over the caps.

3. A quick preview of the next episode of The Brewed Palate In The Kitchen

A. Braising lamb shanks with Brewery Ommegang’s Three Philosophers quadrupel.

Screen Shot 2014-10-23 at 2.43.39 PM

 

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Homebrew Wednesday (Weekly Update) #40: My Brew-versary

My Loin's Roar Pilsner...crystal clear!

My Loin’s Roar Pilsner…crystal clear!

This past Monday my wife informed me that it was the anniversary of when I brewed my first batch of beer on my current equipment (my breakfast stout). Therefore, for this Homebrew Wednesday (weekly update) I chose to crack open a year old bottle of my breakfast stout to celebrate. After talking about the beer I talk about my upcoming brews and interviews and then cut to footage of me taking gravity samples of my Mosaic wet hop IPA and Liquid Sustenance farmhouse pale ale (bottling as well).  Cheers and keep on brewing!!!

Episode Breakdown:

  • My Brew-versary – the anniversary of my first brew on my current brewing equipment i.e. my Breakfast Stout (oatmeal stout aged on cocoa nibs w/ cold pressed coffee added at bottling).
  • Tasting notes on my 2013 Breakfast Stout and plans for the 2014 batch.
  • Upcoming brews and interviews (includes Charlie Papazian on 10/29)
  • Footage of my gravity samples taken from my Mosaic Wet Hop IPA (7.2% abv) and Liquid Sustenance Farmhouse Pale Ale (dry hopped saison) (5.5% abv). Followed by me bottling Liquid Sustenance.
  • Reminder: I’ll be announcing my 300 subscriber contest winner this coming Wednesday (10/22). So check out this video to enter.

Cheers!

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TBP Craft Brewer Interview: Bill Covaleski of Victory Brewing Company

IMG_3314On Wednesday, October 1, 2014 I headed downtown for yet another great brewery tap takeover event at Blind Tiger Ale House this time featuring Victory Brewing Company and 17 of its beers on tap. While there I had the chance to step outside with Victory’s brewmaster and co-founder Bill Covaleski to chat about the recent expansions of his company (new Parkesburg brewery), his experiences with Sierra Nevada’s Beer Camp Across America, and his views on the current growth of craft beer in the US (full list of topics covered below). Enjoy and Cheers!

Note: While I did record separate audio for this interview, my recorder (old mp3 player) ran out of memory space a few minutes into the interview and I was therefore unable to edit together a podcast version of it. 

Topics Covered:

  • Victory’s new Parkesburg, PA brewery and its modern / innovative brewhouse.
  • How brewing is split between there and Downingtown.
  • Limited release beers being brewed in Downingtown – D’Town and Hop Ticket series.
  • Increased capacity brings old beers back and popular beers into the market more regularly.
  • Victory’s barrel program – past and upcoming beers. E.g. White Monkey and their upcoming release of Earth and Flame, a barrel aged scotch ale brewed in collaboration with Earth Bread & Brewery.
  • Bill / Victory’s experiences being one of the 12 breweries chosen for Sierra Nevada’s Beer Camp Across America 12 collaboration beers.
  • The current growth of craft beer in the US.
  • What’s coming up for Victory Brewing Company.
  • Where you can find Victory beers.

Please see my previous post for my thoughts on the beers that I tried at this event.

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Homebrew Wednesday 39: Two side to the coin (craft beer and homebrewing updates)

Click to view video version of this post.

Click to view video version of this post.

For this week’s Homebrew Wednesday update I’ve chosen to switch things up in two ways. The first is giving both homebrewing and craft beer updates because as you may have realized I’ve been trying to bring back more craft beer posts to thebrewedpalate.com. Secondly, though I’ve posted a video version of this HBW on my YouTube channel, I’ve chosen to type it out here in order to save all who don’t want or have time to watch a 15 minute some time. So for all intensive purposes this post serves more as a general The Brewed Palate update than a sharing of homebrewing information.

Homebrewing Updates in order of the “tour” that I gave of my apartment in Homebrew Wednesday 38: 

Seven Blessings Imperial Rye Saison w/ Brett Brux and dried apricots – After a little over 2 months the apricots remain at the top of the carboy and should begin to descend over the next month or so.

Liquid Sustenance “Farmhouse Pale Ale” – i.e. a Saison with American hops and a mostly APA grain bill fermented with The Yeast Bay’s Saison Blend…This past Monday I dry hopped it with 1.5oz of Galaxy and 1oz of Ahtanum hops. I plan on bottling it this coming Monday or Tuesday (10/6 or 7/14).

Mosaic Wet Hopped IPA – This beer is fermenting well over the past week and a half and will either left in primary for another week and a half i.e. a 3 week primary or transferred to a secondary fermenter to clear etc. at the 2 week mark. The blow off jar is smelling so awesome that I’ve been having my wife and friends smell it in order to have them join in on the excitement surrounding my first wet hopped IPA.

Lion’s Roar Pilsner – After lagering for 4 weeks my Firestone Walker Pivo Pils inspired pilsner is tasting great and I’ve begun slowly carbonating it at 11 PSI. I chose to slowly carbonate it because I won’t be home this weekend and therefore can afford to wait to sample it. I’ll definitely be sending some to brewmaster Matt Brynildson once it’s ready.

Interborough Brown Ale (Oatmeal Brown Ale) –  Since tapping this keg I’ve been puzzled by how little this beer tastes like a brown ale in that its flavor profile is more like a creamy and malty ale than a nutty/roasty brown ale. As such, next time I brew it I am going to up the dark malts and also cold steep them to get a smooth roasty espresso flavor…In order to check how much beer was left in the keg I took it out of my keezer for a few minutes so that a condensation line could form and to my surprise I still had about half a keg left. As a result I began calling some friend and telling them to stop by for a pint ASAP. Though if I don’t finish the keg before my IPA is ready I’ll either bottle the rest or fill my growlers and bring them to homebrew club meetings etc.

Craft Beer Updates:

Before getting into my craft beer related updates I’d like to plug a few homebrewing and craft beer magazines. Zymurgy (published by the American Homebrewers Association) and Brew Your Own are both great resources for homebrewing recipes, tips, and news. Next, All About About beer magazine does a great job covering craft beer news from all over the US and international beer scenes with well written in depth articles.

Now on to the updates:

This past Monday I unfortunately had to swap out my CO2 tank because I lost an almost full tank due to an unforeseen leak. After doing so I headed to Whole Foods on 59th Street (Columbus Circle) which has both a retail beer section and a bar that offers 10 beers on tap, bottles to drink there or to take home, and growlers. While there I first grabbed a bottle of Almanac Beer Co. India Pale Ale and a couple of Firestone Walker’s 2014 vintage of Velvet Merkin and then headed to the bar to ask if they had any of Almanac’s sour beers. Luckily they had their Cerise Sour Blonde, Dark Pumpkin Sour, and Heirloom Pumpkin Barleywine. I opted for 2 bottles of the Cerise Sour Blonde because the bottles were $11 each and I’m not a big pumpkin ale fan. While at the bar I first enjoyed a pint of Green Flash’s West Coast IPA (now a double IPA) and then after striking up a conversation with a fellow bar patron I split a bottle of The Commons Brewery’s Urban Farmhouse and discovered that their farmhouse/saison also gives off a touch of sulfur and that my picking up sulfur in my saisons isn’t as big of an issue as I’ve made it out to be.

IMG_3313My second and final craft beer adventure of the week was to yet another brewery tap takeover event at Blind Tiger Ale House where 17 of Victory Brewing Company’s beers were on tap. Because I got there close to sundown I made sure to ask Victory’s founder and brewmaster Bill Covaleski for an interview right away and thankfully we were able to film it before we lost the daylight. After a great interview we headed back inside and I started the evening with Firestone Walker’s Agrestic Ale (yes I know I was at a Victory event). It had a complex sourness and funk to it all while being refreshing. I hope I get the opportunity to try it again. I then moved on to Victory’s Hop Ticket #4 Noble IPA on cask, while it was quite cloudy from being jostled in transit, the beer tasted quite good and the hop character was surprisely close that of an American IPA despite being brewed exclusively with German noble hops (Tettnang Tettnang, Tettnang Hallertau, and Spalt Hallertau). For my third I ask Bill and some of the BT regulars for suggestions because this beer was beer #1600 for me and I wanted it be a memorable experience. I ended up choosing D’town Draft Rye IPA, as a lover of beers that are brewed with a hint of rye (IPAs, Saisons, etc.) this beer brought bready rye and assertive citrusy and tropical fruit notes from Mosaic hops upfront with a spicy and floral moderately bitter finish. All in all a beer that was worth of being #1600. It was then time for a night cap and I chose Victory’s Storm King imperial stout. Like Great Divide’s Yeti and Flying Dog’s Gonzo, Storm King is one of my go to night caps because of its balance of bold hop character and style specific chocolate, espresso, dark fruit, and roasted malt flavors. Having not had this beer on tap in a long time I forgot how drinkable it was for a 9.1% ABV beer. In the end I was able to savor it and still make it home at a reasonable time.

In my next blog post: My interview with Victory Brewing Co. founder and brewmaster Bill Covaleski.

 

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Homebrew Wednesday 38: All this in an NYC apartment?

Sometimes when I tell fellow homebrewers about all the beers and beer related projects that I have in the works they’re puzzled by how I am able to fit them all into my 1 bedroom New York City apartment. My response to them is that I’ve been blessed with a relatively large kitchen and a very tolerant wife….Here’s what I currently have packed in to my NYC apartment. Cheers and Happy Homebrewing!!! Episode Breakdown:

  • Side by side tasting of a bottle of my Lion’s Roar Pilsner (bottle conditioned, non-lagered) and a bottle of Firestone Walker’s Pivo Pils (the beer that inspired Lion’s Roar).
  • A “tour” of the beers and beer related project that I have going in my apartment: beer cap keezer lid, Mosaic Wet Hop IPA, Wild (Brettanomyces and Apricots) Imperial Rye Saison, Liquid Sustenance Farmhouse Pale Ale, and a peek at my craft beer / homebrew stash.
  • Episode wrap up / Upcoming posts: Beer cap keezer lid completion video, follow up posts on the above beers, upcoming brews: HIBC Barleywine 2014 and Holy Beggar’s Breakfast Stout.
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The Holy Inn Brewing Co. Mosaic Wet Hop IPA Brew Day

Spent wet hops

Spent wet hops

As the Northern Hemisphere’s hops are harvested throughout the late Summer and early Fall many craft brewers and home brewers take a portion of their hops and brew with them within a few days of  them being harvested. While many homebrewers grow their own hops, as an New York City resident living in a 5th floor apartment I do not have that luxury. Therefore, I pre-ordered a pound of Mosaic “wet hops” from my local home brew shop Bitter and Esters (700 Washington Ave. Brooklyn, NY) and picked them up  this past Thursday and brewed with them this past Sunday. When putting together my recipe I started with a Bell’s Two Hearted IPA grain bill because I originally ordered a pound of Centennial hops. However, after not hitting their minimum number of preorders, Bitter and Esters informed all those who pre-ordered wet hops that they’d only be getting Mosaic hops. I therefore took into account the complexity that Mosaic hops can bring to an IPA’s aroma and decided to add a pound of wheat malt to the grain bill to keep it light and smooth i.e.  to “fluff it up” a bit. I then decided that since I’d only have a pound of wet hops to work with I’d go for a 5:1 (wet vs. dry) ratio over the popularly used 6:1 ratio and use Magnum hops as my bittering hop. In terms of yeast I chose to keep things simple and use 2 packets of Safale US-05 for a clean American IPA character. Lastly, on brew day I decided to supplement the fact that I did not know the Alpha Acid percentage of the wet hops and my use of a 5:1 ratio by adding o.20 oz of Centennial hop pellets (10% AA) to each of the flavor and aroma hop additions. My hope is that the final product with have a big IPA hop character without being overly bitter.

Stay Tuned for updates on this and other The Holy Inn Brewing Co. beers. Cheers!

Screen Shot 2014-09-23 at 11.30.41 PMPreboil gravity 1.057 (target 1.055), Mash efficiency 84%, Brewhouse efficiency 75.8%

Coming up next: Homebrew Wednesday 38: All This In An NYC Apartment?

 

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