For those of you who only look at the pictures, I'll add two more for you. After two full days of lecture from Ray Daniels on mashing, I bothered him for a picture for the homebrewers who read his material. He's mostly known for Designing Great Beers (which really is a fantastic book for those interested in what the title suggests). He's a cool guy; not only did he partake in our typically obnoxious lunch breaks, he did a great job breaking down mashing for us without making it too confusing.
Second is a delightfully cheesy picture of me after one of our Sensory Analysis sessions. This time it was styles tasting of English, Scottish and Irish beers. Lyn Kruger, president of Siebel, runs the tastings and helps us learn to identify the flavors we should taste as well as the flavors that probably shouldn't be there. Unfortunately we've learned a lot about how traumatic importing/exporting beer is. After learning to isolate oxidation and other side affects of failing beer stability, these beers were mostly gross. The only one we didn't pour out was Mackesons XXX (brewed in North America, less oxidized). I kind of liked the Scottish heather tips ale too because the spices almost hid the off-flavors. The worst was Sam Smiths IPA- it tasted like the smell of imported leaf hops. Yes, we poured out gallons and gallons of beer this day.


1 comment:
Awesome, man. A friend and I have been considering moving in an apartment together, attending brewing college, and bouncing ideas off of each other. Siebel sounds like a possible avenue for doing that. Been doing a lot of private study but would love to take it to the next level.
Congratulations on the milestone!
You've probably already read/heard about this, but if you haven't check it out:
http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2008/09/23/ancient-yeast-beer.html
Post a Comment