Saturday, May 26, 2007

Anna Photos

I put Anna in our doll cradle sitting up, and put Sophia's Giant Panda (literally, giant) on her lap. I took some pictures of her playing with her toys.






Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Brewing a wheat doppelbock


Ah, spring. On May 21st, 2007, after a brief hiatus from brewing following Anna's birth in February, I finally managed to stay up late and brew what will hopefully be my tastiest brew yet. It is a clone of Aventinus wheat doppelbock, brewed by Private Weissbierbrauerei G. Schneider & Sohn, described by the brewery as, "Dark-ruby, almost black-colored and streaked with fine top-fermenting yeast, this beer has a compact and persistent head. This is a very intense wheat doppelbock with a complex spicy chocolate-like aroma with a hint of banana and raisins. On the palate, you experience a soft touch and on the tongue it is very rich and complex, though fresh with a hint of caramel. It finishes in a rich soft and lightly bitter impression." Sounds good to me.

Brewing started after dinner, about 7:30pm, by heating up 5 gallons of water to 163 deg F. This was not as easy as it sounds because I have suspected that our thermometers are not reading accurately, so after a couple of efforts to calibrate one of them, I got the water to temperature and added it to the crushed grains, all 18.5 lbs of them. The grain bill was:

10 lbs American White Wheat Malt

6 lbs American Pale 2-row Malt

1.5 lbs American Munich Malt

9 oz. 90 deg Lov. Crystal Malt

1 oz. Chocolate Malt

4 oz. Caramunich Malt

I increased the amount of malt the recipe called for by 2.5 lbs to make sure I didn't fall short of my predicted specific gravity (a measure of how much sugar gets dissolved into the sweet wort). I'm glad I did because I was right on target. I'm still not sure why my beers have been coming out with lower gravities than expected. I was thinking the lower mashing efficiencies were caused by inaccurate temperature readings, but that may not be it, or may only be a part of it.

Mashing takes about 90 minutes. Then sparging (straining the spent grains out of the now sweet liquid) took another hour, then getting three kettles boiling took me another hour. The picture to the left is the bucket of spent grains.






I let the wort boil for close to an hour before putting in 1 oz. of German Halertauer hop pellets for bittering. Once the bittering hops were in, the wort boiled for another hour, with an addition of 1/2 oz. more of the same hops, this time for aroma. I skipped the addition of Irish moss (a clearing agent) with the aroma hops, but it shouldn't matter since I boiled the wort for an hour prior to adding the hops.



The next step is cooling the beer. You can see the tubing in the big stock pot on the right of the range top that is connected to a copper coil. One of the tubes has a connection that fits the threads on a faucet, and allows water (preferably cold if you want the boiled wort to cool) to be circulated through the copper and draw the heat out of the wort and then carries the now hot water through the exit tube and into the sink. That cloudy stuff in the pot is the "cold break" or proteins that precipitate out of the wort when it is cooled. This is beneficial to the clarity of the final beer as well as improving the taste.

The penultimate step pertaining to brewing is the pitching of the yeast into the cooled wort. For this beer I had a 1 quart starter made from the yeast packet (containing liquid yeast and nutrients). The yeast called for in the recipe is Wyeast 3333 German Wheat. Wheat yeasts typically produce a combination of estery flavors (banana or other fruit-like tastes) and phenolic flavors (clove or other spicy, sometimes medicinal).
The yeast is contained in a plastic pouch inside the foil packet. The pouch is smacked to break the pouch and release the yeast into a nutrient rich environment so it can start reproducing and build up a large enough "colony" to do the work of fermenting the wort. Although it is possible to pitch the yeast/nutrient liquid directly into a 5 gallon batch of wort, it is better to create a 1 quart starter by boiling 1 quart of water for 10 minutes with enough dry malt extract to make a wort with a specific gravity (s.g.) of 1.045. This yeast starter is then added the wort in the fermentation pail, which is then covered with a tight fitting lid with an airlock to let the CO2 gas escape during fermentation, but keep oxygen and contaminants out, because these things can ruin the beer.

The final step on brewing day (or brewing night) is to clean up the mess--which means wipe up the spilled wort off the floor, off the stove, clean the cooking pots, wort chiller, sparging pail, miscellaneous plastic tubing, and put it all away. I usually get most of this done, but occasionally wait until morning to put the clean pots and pails away.
The Aventinus clone has a starting gravity of 1.075, which will result in a beer of approximately 7.7% alcohol by volume. As of late, my beers have been attenuating more than the recipes I follow predicts it to be, which means they have a little more alcohol (assuming they started at the predicted s.g.), and are a little less full bodied than what they should be. Oh well, they usually still taste pretty darn good. I bottled this beer on July 1st and used 1-1/4 cups of wheat dry malt extract dissolved in two cups of water to prime the bottles so the final beer will be carbonated. The final gravity was 1.010, which was 0.005 below the anticipated final gravity.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Sophia's creations


Sophia is very creative. She is all about presentation. So is Ellie.
How to make a tomato flower:
You take a piece of tomato, then kind of rip up the middle to make a stem. Then take some little pieces of bread and add them as leaves.



How to make a makeup kit:
What you do is take some toilet paper and pile it up, then you staple it around the edges. Then you fold up another piece of paper and put that on top with some lip gloss.

Monday, May 14, 2007

A Birthday Party!

Margaret turned 11 on April 22. She had a party yesterday with her friends to celebrate. They decorated t-shirts, had some strawberry shortcake, opened presents, and had (I think) a fun time. Here are some photos of the day:

Balloons on Grandma's mailbox,

The Girls at work in the studio,

Having some food,

and Presents!

These are the shirts we made. Sophie and Ellie's were painted by me, Margaret's is the one she made at the party. All of the girls did really great work, I was impressed!

Monday, May 7, 2007

Girls in the Mud

Sophie and Ellie played outside on their swings today,

and got a bit muddy.

:)

Friday, May 4, 2007

Scone recipe

Whenever I bake Sophia and Ellie always try and get on my good side. They make remarks like 'That looks delicious, Margaret' and 'You are the best cook in the world'. Those remarks are way too nice to be real. But I took advantage of their cravings for scones and had them help me do the dishes while the scones baked.


I made up a scone recipe earlier this morning. It's adapted from several other scone recipes I have made in the past. They are really moist, light and flaky. I decided to share it:

Cream Currant scones

3 cups flour
2 tbsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. salt
1 tbsp. sugar
1/3 cup butter, melted
3/4 cup heavy whipping cream ( you don't have to use cream, just increase milk to 1 1/4 cup)
3/4 cup milk
1/2 cup currants or raisins (optional)

1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees F (220 degrees C)

2. In a large mixing bowl, stir together flour, baking powder, sugar, and salt. Add butter, cream, currants, and milk, stir until a spongy dough has formed.

3. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface ( the dough is a bit sticky, so flouring your hands helps). Pat dough into a rectangle about 3/4 in. thick and 7 inches wide. Cut into 6 triangles.

4. Bake the scones on a lightly greased baking sheet ( I use butter) and bake at 425 degrees F for about 10-13 minutes, until lightly browned.

Have fun baking!

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

The ever-elusive smile


Time to post more photos of baby Anna. She's a very happy, contented and frequently smiley baby, but we can't seem to capture that smile on camera.

Here are some recent attempts:

Almost a smile

Looking rather surprised

The closest one yet, but more of a grin than a smile.

Our Pets


Blaise is a smooth coated border collie. He may have some blue heeler in him too. We got him from the Kansas Humane Society when he was six months old. He is a year and a half old now. He was sick with Parvovirus when we got him, but he is a survivor.
He also is a big love sponge, he's my dog :). Despite being real cute, he's still a buthead. He took our pansies and ripped them up today! He also counter surfs, a trait from being a stray. He is the alpha dog.

Maggie is a rough coat border collie. We also got her from the Kansas Humane Society. She chases brooms, vacuums, and anything that moves. This includes people's feet. She is hand shy and hates getting brushed. She puts up with Blaise, her character is pretty submissive. She is thirteen years old. She has arthritis and is pretty grouchy.

Our guinea pig, Patch, is three years old. Her birthday is June 1st. She is sisters with Penny. We got them from some friends in Overland Park. She is pretty shy and skittish. Their hutch was built by Grandpa Jim (thank you! :) last summer.

Penny is Patch's sister. They share everything. Her personality is not so skittish, she is more brave than her sister.

Our betta fish, Princess Leia, was named by Sophia after the Star Wars character. I got him from our church Fall Festival as a prize for a game. We have had him since last October. I let Sophia name him to make up for the fact that she couldn't get one. This is because they only had male fish, we had one bowl, and males kill and eat each other.