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So I’ve had several of these since I bottled them about a month ago. I just haven’t had a chance to officially sit down and “taste” it.
Several guests had one of these at our “First Ever Friendsgivingmas” party we threw a couple weeks ago, and reviews were generally favorable, though I don’t know how much of that was out of politeness, and how much of that was genuine. Maintaining my role of “harshest self critic,” these are the thoughts that roll through my mind.
As a quick overview, I’ll just say this: This beer disappointed me.
Not because it wasn’t good. But because it doesn’t taste at all how I hoped it would. That said, it still is pretty good. Here’s the lowdown on my first self-written recipe.
Appearance: (3.5/5) A very thin, bright white head bubbles at the top of this darkish-gold brew, but then quickly fizzes away, never to be seen again. No lacing, no residual bubbling, nothing. This is the clearest beer I’ve made, which was expected considering this was the first time I’d tried Whirlfloc (a tablet-ized Irish moss, a fining agent meant to remove haze and other effects of excess proteins in beer). But it’s still hazy. And considering the amount of flaked oats and wheat in the grain bill, I’d figure this beer would have more head to it. But…it just doesn’t. Lots to learn as I go about this.
Aroma: (3.5/5) Crisper than I’d expected. A hint of banana, a hint of toast, a very mild hint of cinnamon. I wanted more cinnamon. I wanted more toastiness. I didn’t want any banana. That’s a sign of botched fermentation (in this case). There’s a little fruitiness from the little bit of hops added, but not much. It doesn’t smell at all like Christmas cookies. Not in the least. But it still smells good. So while it’s a failure from the point of view of my goals, it’s still successful (mostly) as a beer by itself.
Taste: (3.5/5) Once again, it doesn’t taste much at all like I’d hoped. In hindsight, I should have styled this as more of a low-hopped brown ale than as a mild. It needs more robustness. Theres no cinnamon flavor at all. The little bit you get in the nose is completely gone by the time it reaches your palate. A little tiny bit of toastiness, a little tiny bit of fruitiness (probably a product of the Belgian Special B malt). But it’s bright. It’s a bright little beer. And as disappointed as I am in it…it’s not bad.
Drinkability/Mouthfeel: (4.5/5) Here is the main highlight of this beer. You can drink it all day. Heck, you can two-fist these. It’s easy on the palate, it’s not too heavy, it’s not too thin. Despite the lack of visible effervescence, it’s not as flat as I expected. Still needs more bubbles, but this isn’t bad at all. Very approachable, and with a few tweaks, could make a pretty darned good, standard mild.
Design: (4/5) I’m just going to go ahead and say it. This is one of my favorite designs I’ve come up with. I like the fonts I found to use. I like the color selection (especially that minty green). I like the way all the colors play together. I like this design. I like it a lot. It’s not perfect, but nothing is. But this is awful darned close, especially since it looks even better on the bottle. It just looks like a Merry Christmas…and that’s the point of this beer. Well…it was supposed to be the point. But at least it still looks like it!
Overall: (19/25) Despite my disappointments with the final execution of the concept I aimed for, this is (by the numbers) far and away the most successful beer I’ve made yet. But the style of beer was all wrong for this concept. More malt, more color, more bubbles were all needed to execute what I was after. And that’s what I’ll go for next year when I make another attempt at it. But I’m going to take what I learned from this one, and make it into more of a traditional mild. Because, frankly, it’s still a good beer.
The post Tasting: Kekse Christmas Cookie Mild appeared first on The Midwest Guy.
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Okay, I’ve relied on pre-fab extract kits for long enough. Okay, yeah, two batches may not seem like a lot, but when you’re as impatient as I am, and am limited by equipment to one batch at a time (at 3+ weeks per batch), it seems like a long time. And did I mention I’m impatient? Strange hobby for an impatient person, but I love it.
So, to the beer. And with the Christmas season now officially “here,” I figured why not get a holiday brew ready?
I’ll start by saying I got the idea for this recipe from the king of home brewing, John Palmer. He did a video a while back about doing an oak aged, all-grain, English Mild, and kept talking about how it was going to get a lot of nice cookie notes in the final product. Well, me being the chubby kid that can’t pass up a good cookie to save his life, I decided to take the idea to the next level, and bring out all the cookie a beer can possibly have.
At least all the cookie a beer can have and not be super-sweet or like drinking an actual cookie.
As for the name, “Kekse” is the German word for…you guessed it…”cookie.” And, so you’re not pondering it too hard, it’s pronounced CAKE’-seh.
So here’s the recipe:

Speciality Grains:
Fermentables:
Hops:
Yeast:
Adjuncts:
Vitals (according to the EXTRA handy Brewer’s Friend):

Before I go too much further, let me explain something so the laypeople out there about cinnamon. That stuff you’re shaking onto your toast with sugar in the morning? That’s not cinnamon. That stick you have steeping and making the house smell incredible in your potpourri crock? That’s not cinnamon. That stuff that’s ladled all over your cinnamon roll? That’s not cinnamon.
That’s cassia.
And cassia is often used in these situations for two main reasons. 1. It’s easier to grow (and thus much less expensive) and 2. It’s MUCH more intense that true cinnamon. I didn’t want intense. It’s a “mild” beer. I wanted balance and delicateness.
I just wanted to make that clear.
Brewday:
November 18, 2012
I finally got myself a fry thermometer for my brewing. I also fry a lot of things day-to-day, so it will get plenty of use. I used that thermometer to bring the water up to 165˚ to steep the specialty grains, assuming carry-over would take the temp to the desired 170˚ (which I was a little more cautious about after the previous brewday’s adventure of letting the steeping water getting to a near-dangerous 182˚).
After steeping the specialty grains for 20 mins, I noticed the water never got quite up to that 170˚ I was after, but alas, not a big deal. Hung around 168˚. The steeped grain water spelled chocolatey and bready…yet unusually “clean.” That’s the best I can describe it. The color was a beautiful, reddish copper. However, I noticed the larger-than-usual specialty grain bag pulled in a lot of water, so I had to top off the kettle before I got back to work.
Once I got the water back up to a boil, I broke out the Maris Otter extract. And may I just say…it’s delicious on its own. I’ve heard other homebrewers openly consider pouring it over pancakes before. I can now see why.
After mixing the extract into the wort, the kettle smelled like toasty caramel, but otherwise seemingly neutral. That “clean” aroma again. A little bit of bread character, but not a lot.
At 45 minutes, I added in the first and only round of hops. The East Kent Goldings, which are very mild but rather aromatic and spicy, added a spicy, floral aroma to the still toasty caramel smell in the pot. But the floral notes actually started fading within minutes of adding the hops to the wort.
I decided to make my first venture into clear-beer brewing by adding Whirlfloc to this beer at the 15 minute mark. For those who don’t know, Whirlfloc is a tablet-ized Irish Moss, which takes the proteins that cause hazy beer to coagulate and sink, leaving a clear brew. So when I added the half-tablet to the kettle, I noticed I was starting to get some of those cookie aromas I was after. The hops were still present in the aroma, but still fading.
At 5 minutes, I tossed in the cinnamon stick. Uncut, uncrushed, just raw, intact, cinnamon stick. I wanted the cinnamon to be there, but not powerful. The cinnamon aroma mixed beautifully with the toast and caramel and spice already in the kettle. It seemed balanced at this (admittedly) early stage to the nose. Exactly what I was after.
But at 0 minutes (flameout), the cinnamon intensified a bit. More than I had hoped. I immediately pulled the stick out of the still-hot wort. Cinnamon is now the dominant aroma. I hope that fades.
After chilling the wort and getting it into the fermenter, the cinnamon aroma has already calmed down. I can see the Whirlfloc in action. Globs of protein are gathering and swirling, waiting for their opportunity to sink. And with the raw, flaked oats and wheat, there’s going to be plenty of protein to work out. I’m expecting plenty of trub at the bottom of the bucket when I bottle everything. Going to have to be careful not to drag that back up.
Assuming I can manage that, and the cinnamon stays calm, I think this is going to be a great beer.
Update: Here’s how it tasted!
The post Recipe: Kekse (Christmas Cookie Mild) – First Self Made Brew! appeared first on The Midwest Guy.
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