Homebrew
Long have we dreamed of brewing our own
beer. We have dabbled with fermentation over the years with hard
apple and honey ciders, even concocted a delicious honey mead with
the guidance of a visiting brew-master friend who introduced me to
Charlie Papazian's The Complete Joy of Homebrewing
(3rd edition, 2003), but brewing and bottling a real beer has been a
dream left on the to-do list year after year. Some dreams simply need
longer to ferment, awaiting the right combination and that's when we
met a new friend, a young brew-master with brew equipment and a
passion for sharing his art. We purchased a few 20-liter beer kit
recipes with malted grains and pre-measured packets of hops and yeast
from http://www.mundocervecero.cl and he guided us through the steps:
sanitizing equipment, mashing and sparging the grains, boiling the
wort, pitching the yeast.
Our
first beer brewed at home was an India Pale Ale so intoxicatingly
delicious that we went into a frenzy rotating homebrews through
fermentors, collecting bottles from friends and from restaurants,
happy to be practicing the ancient art of brewing and having
wonderful new elixirs to share. We brewed Oatmeal Stout and Dry
Stout, California Common Ale and Scottish Ale, Belgium Trippel Ale
and Pale Ale. The flow of the process improved with every try as we
tasted sugars exploding in our mash while feeding the woodstove fire,
learning temperature ranges by feel, and getting comfortable with the
basic sanitary precautions necessary to cultivate yeast, not
bacteria. But the satisfaction weeks and months later when at
friendly gatherings we are able to indulge ourselves and our guests
with a variety of flavored homebrew: priceless. The mark of a sweet
dream in progress is a toast to health between glasses and ours all
the sweeter for the friendships that have guided our learning and the
ability to confidently raise a homebrew to cheer.
And
now having learned the basics of the international beer standard, my
creative imagination wanders toward new directions. While I enjoy
very much the combination produced by mixing malted barley, hops,
yeast, sugar, and water, a part of me is curious as to the wonders
untasted of malting different grains or vegetables in combination
with different herbs or fruits, especially focusing on local
varieties available in season growing in our forest home. A true
homebrew should carry the accent of the land it is brewed in so I
wander the forest taking in the scent of meli leaves and maqui
fruits, ponder how much sugar I can draw from malted avellanas or
piƱones, what fragrance murta berries might impart, what bitterness
and health properties can be found in adding artemisa or sage.
Brewing as ancient art, as medicinal concoction, as a celebratory
beverage, I think of my own ancestors protesting Prohibition, not
wanting to lose all the unique brews that were outlawed and then
forgotten within a generation. I am heartened to see homebrewing
gaining popularity and especially the varieties that are resulting. A
toast to our brewing dreams! Salud!
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