dried fruit; process or not
dried fruit; process or not
Concecration is ready for the secondary. I was going to run the dried currents through the food processor but then started to consider the 3-4 months that the brew will be in the secondary and was wondering if I needed to or should. Any suggestions?
John Buck
Brother John's Brewing
The Monk at the Hartley Monastary
Brother John's Brewing
The Monk at the Hartley Monastary
Re: dried fruit; process or not
Most of my fruit beers have used the canned puree, so I'd lean towards using the processor.
A Mighty Wind's A Brewing
“Life is short - break the rules, forgive quickly, kiss slowly, love truly, laugh uncontrollably, and never regret anything that made you smile” ― Mae West
“Life is short - break the rules, forgive quickly, kiss slowly, love truly, laugh uncontrollably, and never regret anything that made you smile” ― Mae West
Re: dried fruit; process or not
I have not not practiced this- as I have not used dried fruit to dry hop, but if I did I would loosely follow the instruction I recall.
If you are concerned about inducing an infection, I would run the currents through your food processor. And then try to sanitize them by soaking them with a little bit of distilled spirits, like a nice brandy or vodka; just enough to cover them.
Soak them overnight and dump the whole think into the secondary.
Brandy might provide a nice background flavor....vodka shouldn't provide any additional flavoring. Both might introduce a little bit of alcohol flavor if you use the cheap stuff. But using less than a 1/2 cup to a cup in a 5 gallon batch....the taste (of the distilled spirit) is probably lost.
If you are concerned about inducing an infection, I would run the currents through your food processor. And then try to sanitize them by soaking them with a little bit of distilled spirits, like a nice brandy or vodka; just enough to cover them.
Soak them overnight and dump the whole think into the secondary.
Brandy might provide a nice background flavor....vodka shouldn't provide any additional flavoring. Both might introduce a little bit of alcohol flavor if you use the cheap stuff. But using less than a 1/2 cup to a cup in a 5 gallon batch....the taste (of the distilled spirit) is probably lost.
Last edited by daryl on Mon Jun 20, 2016 12:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
In the Fridge/On Tap: English Bitter, Schwarzbier, Cream Ale
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In the queue: Irish Red, American IPA
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In the bucket:
In the queue: Irish Red, American IPA
- andrewmaixner
- Posts: 691
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Re: dried fruit; process or not
In a mixed fermentation sach/brett/pedio/lacto beer, isn't acetobacter the only thing that could possibly infect it -- which can't do anything bad unless you let oxygen in?
Re: dried fruit; process or not
An alternative to soaking in liquor might be to vat pasteurize the fruit. 20 minutes at 160 degrees Fahrenheit should suffice.
However, I'm not sure as to activating the pectins in the fruit.
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However, I'm not sure as to activating the pectins in the fruit.
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On Tap at the Laughing-Kitten Pub:
* Foggy Bottom NEIPA
* Gluten Free Stoutish Ale
* Botched Bitter
* Club Barrel Robust Porter (cellar)
On deck/fermenting:
* Belle's Helles (cue AC/DC)
* Foggy Bottom NEIPA
* Gluten Free Stoutish Ale
* Botched Bitter
* Club Barrel Robust Porter (cellar)
On deck/fermenting:
* Belle's Helles (cue AC/DC)
Re: dried fruit; process or not
I made the concecration clone from more beer once and just dumped in the currants. Any fruit beer I make i just dump them in. No worries about infection. You already have a lot of alcohol in there.
Matt Franklin
Slappy Brewing North
On Tap:
American IPA
Strata Hazy IPA
Dr. Lee Orval
American Strong Ale
Friend of the Devil Belgian Golden Strong
Imperial Stout
Slappy Brewing North
On Tap:
American IPA
Strata Hazy IPA
Dr. Lee Orval
American Strong Ale
Friend of the Devil Belgian Golden Strong
Imperial Stout
Re: dried fruit; process or not
Ok. A compromise....
Pour a rather large, nice brandy.
Dump the dried fruit into the brew.
Drink the brandy.
No worries!
Pour a rather large, nice brandy.
Dump the dried fruit into the brew.
Drink the brandy.
No worries!
In the Fridge/On Tap: English Bitter, Schwarzbier, Cream Ale
In the keg: Wheat Beer, Russian Imperial Stout
In the bucket:
In the queue: Irish Red, American IPA
In the keg: Wheat Beer, Russian Imperial Stout
In the bucket:
In the queue: Irish Red, American IPA
Re: dried fruit; process or not
That's the best process yet!
Sent from my A0001 using Tapatalk
Sent from my A0001 using Tapatalk
On Tap at the Laughing-Kitten Pub:
* Foggy Bottom NEIPA
* Gluten Free Stoutish Ale
* Botched Bitter
* Club Barrel Robust Porter (cellar)
On deck/fermenting:
* Belle's Helles (cue AC/DC)
* Foggy Bottom NEIPA
* Gluten Free Stoutish Ale
* Botched Bitter
* Club Barrel Robust Porter (cellar)
On deck/fermenting:
* Belle's Helles (cue AC/DC)
Re: dried fruit; process or not
I agree, CHEERS!
A Mighty Wind's A Brewing
“Life is short - break the rules, forgive quickly, kiss slowly, love truly, laugh uncontrollably, and never regret anything that made you smile” ― Mae West
“Life is short - break the rules, forgive quickly, kiss slowly, love truly, laugh uncontrollably, and never regret anything that made you smile” ― Mae West
Re: dried fruit; process or not
Thanks guys. I dumped the unprocessed currants into my wall mounted conical added the brew and put on a brand new sterilized bung and airlock. I'll let you know in September.
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John Buck
Brother John's Brewing
The Monk at the Hartley Monastary
Brother John's Brewing
The Monk at the Hartley Monastary
Re: dried fruit; process or not
But how was the brandy?
- UndeadFred
- Posts: 259
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Re: dried fruit; process or not
I am late into this, but I would have said, alcohol extraction and/or maybe a k-meta and sit for 36 hour.. You likely will be perfectly fine with your just dumping it in though as it's relatively hard to infect a finished beer-- sacrilege, to say this to brewers.. but still mostly true...