Difference between revisions of "The Rare Barrel"

From Milk The Funk Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(putting reference back in)
Line 17: Line 17:
  
 
==Recipes==
 
==Recipes==
Jay Goodwin released the recipes for their base wort on episodes 1 and 2 of ''The Sour Hour''.
+
Jay Goodwin released the recipes for their base wort on episodes 1 and 2 of ''The Sour Hour'' <ref>[http://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=496393 User "mbbransc" on Homebrewtalk.  10/24/2014.  Retrieved 04/26/2015.]</ref>.
 
===Golden (loosely based on lambic)===
 
===Golden (loosely based on lambic)===
 
* 12° Plato (1.048 SG)
 
* 12° Plato (1.048 SG)

Revision as of 09:27, 27 April 2015

The Rare Barrel Logo

The Rare Barrel is a brewery that specializes in sour beers in Berkeley, CA. The company was started by Jay Goodwin (blending and brewing), Alex Wallash (sales and marketing), and Brad Goodwin (finance and legal).
Website
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram

Interviews

Podcast

Jay Goodwin hosts a monthly podcast for The Brewing Network called The Sour Hour, which focuses on sour and wild brewing. The Sour Hour podcast is highly recommended by the members of Milk The Funk.
iTunes
Direct Downloads/XML

Online Articles

Recipes

Jay Goodwin released the recipes for their base wort on episodes 1 and 2 of The Sour Hour [1].

Golden (loosely based on lambic)

  • 12° Plato (1.048 SG)
  • 70% base malt (any type; probably Belgian Pilsner)
  • 12% malted wheat
  • 6% rolled oats
  • 6% spelt malt (substitute wheat if you can't procure spelt)
  • 6% special aromatic (specifically Franco-Belges; substitute with Vienna or Light Munich)

Red

  • 14° Plato (1.057 SG)
  • 70% base malt (any type; probably Belgian Pilsner)
  • 12% malted wheat
  • 4.5% rolled oats
  • 4.5% spelt malt (substitute wheat if you can't procure spelt)
  • 4.5% special aromatic (specifically Franco-Belges; substitute with Vienna or Light Munich)
  • 4.5% crystal 60
  • Use dehusked black (Carafa II or III) to adjust color to you liking; ~1%

Bruin

  • 16° Plato (1.065 SG)
  • 70% base (any type; probably Belgian Pilsner)
  • 12% malted wheat
  • 3.6% rolled oats
  • 3.6% spelt malt (substitute wheat if you can't procure spelt)
  • 3.6% special aromatic (specifically Franco-Belges; substitute with Vienna or Light Munich)
  • 3.6% crystal 60
  • 3.6% chocolate
  • Use dehusked black (Carafa II or III) to adjust color to you liking; ~1%

References