Sunday, March 23, 2008

Edwin Faraday Phillips (October 05, 1930 - March 22, 2008)

Our dad passed away last night. He was the smartest, kindest person we ever knew, and our role model for life. Cherie Mac and I will miss him terribly. Please keep he and my mom in your prayers.
My dad, my grand daughter, my daughter in-law, and my mom - and his buddy Allie

To check out a blog we've started on Dad and his wide ranging impact on the world, see http://edwinfaradayphillips.blogspot.com/

Monday, March 17, 2008

Pool's Open



The pool reached 70 degrees this weekend. That is cause for celebration, so I poured a light homebrew and jumped in and cleaned the walls. Don't try this in Michigan!

Monday, March 10, 2008

The Great Light (but not Lite) Beer Experiment

Yesterday I concluded my month long study of the effects of the alpha-galactosidase enzyme on polysacharrides. Or, in other words, I added Beano to my fermented beer to reduce the carbohydrates. Reduced carbs equals lighter beer! Here’s the theory:

When beer has finished fermenting (see “My Love Affair with Yeast” blog in my earlier post) there are still carbohydrates in it. Yeast can only ferment simple sugars and will not utilize complex carbohydrates, such as polysacharrides or dextrins. If I could somehow break up the unfermentable carbs into simple sugars, the yeast would be free to consume them and I would have a lower carb beer. And more alcohol baby! Commercial brewers do this with the enzyme amyloglucosidase. I used Beaneaux (the Louisiana version of Beano).

Each tablet of Beaneaux delivers 150 units (150 GALUs to my geek friends) of enzyme. I tried 3 tablets per 5 gallon batch of beer. I chose to add the Beaneaux after primary fermentation was complete and I had racked to the secondary fermenter. The beauty of adding it later is that I can measure my initial gravity after fermentation, and then measure it again after the alpha-galactosidase enzyme has done its thing, thus letting me measure its effectiveness! But wait, there’s more!

Taking the carbohydrates out of the homebrew makes it taste thinner, because carbs give your beer mouthfeel. This is not a good thing. Well, it is not a good thing if Coors light is not your mainstay. To compensate for this, I need to add back something that is non-carbohydrate and non-fermentable. Enter the other secret ingredient…Splenda! Yeah baby, I’m talking that good old fashioned mixture of maltodextrin and sucralose in the yellow packets that you find on the counter at IHOP ( BTW – the packets actually have dextrose in them, so make sure you use the stuff in the box). For every gravity point removed by the Beaneaux, I wanted to add back an equivalent amount with Splenda.

So here’s the math. Feel free to skip to the end if you’re not a beer-math geek. My first batch was a Blonde Ale (see “It’s a Blonde” blog in my earlier post). Actually, I went a bit heavy on the specialty grains, so she turned out to be a Brunette. My original gravity before primary fermentation was 1.051. My final gravity (pre-Beaneaux) was 1.012 (all measurements converted to 60 deg F). That should yield a beer that is 5.4% ABV (alcohol by volume). I added 3 Beaneaux tablets when I racked to the secondary and, low and behold, she was bubbling the next day. Amazing…it works! After 2 weeks I checked the gravity again. I had reduced it to 1.004! Yeah baby, another 8 points worth of gravity reduction, or a 6.4% ABV brewski. I have created a Lighter beer! Less carbs…more alcohol…great mouthfeel. You won’t hear that on a Sunday afternoon ball game ad.

A little blurry, but you can see the gravity at just over 0.000

Once the excitement had become controllable, I calculated how much Splenda I would need to replace the mouthfeel in the beer. Splenda can be swapped for sugar on a per volume basis (a 3.8 oz box of Splenda is equivalent to 2 lbs of sugar). A rule of thumb for sucrose is to add just short of 2 oz. for every gravity point lost in a 5 gal batch. So, for my really cool 8 gravity point drop, I needed to add 8 x 2 = 16 oz equivalent volume of Splenda. I dumped 2 cups of Splenda in the beer and now she sits and conditions for a couple of weeks. Stay tuned for the final chapter on the Brunette…

I also had a batch of Bridgeport IPA that I made with a final gravity of 1.017. I added 4 tablets of Beaneaux and after 2 weeks measured my gravity at 1.006. Whoa – another success with an 11 point gravity drop! That’s another 1.5% ABV with fewer carbs. I added the calculated amount of Splenda to this batch and she also sits in the conditioning mode for a couple of weeks. Actually, I used less that the calculated amount because my box of Splenda ran out and I didn’t feel like driving to the store after consuming many homebrews, so this in itself will be a relative mouthfeel comparison.

Finally, some notes on the laboratory experience. The Splenda foams upon introduction to the beer. The natural inclination is to want to stir it in, but in an effort to minimize oxygen entrainment (aka skunky beer) this stirring must be done very carefully and quietly – a very difficult combination to achieve when you are trying to mix a solid into a liquid. I think that next time I will add the Splenda to some hot water and dissolve it before I add it to the beer.

The Brunette, the Splenda, the hydrometer, and the Beaneaux. Oh...and a homebrew...

Note: portions of my text were excerpted from Charles Parker in BYO magazine May-June 2004

Friday, March 7, 2008

Part II - Help, I'm Surrounded by BBQ and I Can't Find a Real Beer...

Indeed, they know tons about barbecue, but they know so little about beer. Four hundred sixty-one barbecue pits and all I could find was Bud Light, Miller Lite, and Coors Light...the 3 basic beer groups down here. No Inversion IPA, no Lagunitas Capucino Stout, no Mirror Pond Ale, not even a Sierra Nevada Pale Ale. Oh, woe is me...I have so much work to do with my countrymen and women. In the meantime, I did find rum, and there was plenty of Coke, and I had unlimited access to open bars, so I was set.

On with the adventure...



Six Flags Over Texas and Texas-sized Mardi Gras Beads


And a couple of more BBQ alleys we walked...


A Couple of Flags that EP can Appreciate...


Pork anyone? This bad boy was going for a full 12 hours over a real wood fire


A couple more booths worth photographing..


And my favorite sign
It wouldn't be a Texas barbecue without washer pitchin'...

...or a good man to shine your boots...

...or a little cowboy

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Part I - You Know You're in Texas When...

...there are 461 teams vying to be the best of the best in barbecue! Babs and I attended the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo World Championship Barbecue Contest this weekend. Unless you've been to a major Texas barbecue, you can only imagine what we experienced. Held at arguably the biggest sports complex on earth, complete with a ferris wheel, full sized painted statues of horses, and a band in every tent, we went where few people seldom go. Well, actually, I guess that a few hundred thousand people went over the 3 days that the contest raged. Although the beer was nothing to brag about, there were plenty of potential pairings. Here are some photos that we took. Enjoy!
Reliant Stadium (Home of the Texans)...the Astrodome (former home of the Oilers)...and an F750 pickup truck (how many tons is that?)...things are definitely bigger in Texas!
How can you have a barbecue without a ferris wheel? You had to walk through a Texas sized carnival to get to the barbecue booths.
Here's a map of the area and a listing of the names of each of the 461 contestants. It pretty much covered the entire parking lot of the entire Relaint Stadium complex. The wait list to be no.462 is 7 years!
The first place we were a guest at was "Sharks R Us"; a collection of 13 lawyers and judges who love to cook. This their mobile, and their pit and entrance below.

One of many of the barbecue alleys we walked
This 18-wheeler is probably one of the biggest barbecue pits in the world. If you look close, you can see the large screen TV. How could you think of cooking without one!
If your band was good enough to get out of the tent, you could play here
This has got to be some good stuff!
Posey had a nicely designed facade
As did my old friend Jack (notice Babs making a bee line...)

And then getting "bandana'd

Saturday, March 1, 2008

On The Way to Houston!

Today Babs and I are driving to Reliant Park in Houston to attend the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo to immerse ourselves in the World's Championship Barbeque Contest! There will be unlimited barbecue and of course, beer, to partake for the entire afternoon. You gotta love Texas. We reserved a room at a nearby hotel so that we can fully participate and not have to worry about driving home under the influence of my favorite beverage. My camera is packed, and there will be a major posting forthcoming. Stay tuned.

Until then...Cheers!