Hot Side Aeration - Pepper Beer
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   Category Specialty Beer
 Recipe Type All Grain
 Batch Size 10 gal
 Volume Boiled 12 gal
 Mash Efficiency 82 %
 Total Grain/Extract 25.00 lbs
 Total Hops 3.5 oz
 18 lbs American 2-row
 2 lbs Belgian Cara-Pils
 5 lbs American Caramel 10°L
 
 1.0 oz Chinook (Whole, 9.6 %AA) boiled 35 min.
 .5 oz Chinook (Whole, 9.6 %AA) boiled 20 min.
 1 oz Willamette (Whole, 6.9 %AA) boiled 5 min.
 1 oz Willamette (Whole, 6.9 %AA) boiled 1 min.
 .25 lb. Cayenne Peppers (fresh, medium sized) (not included in calculations)
 .75 lb. Jalapeno Peppers (fresh, medium sized) (not included in calculations)
 .25 lb. Hungarian Yellow Peppers (fresh, medium) (not included in calculations)
 Yeast : Wyeast 2565 Kolsch Yeast
 Execute all-grain mashing as traditional (165 deg, etc.).
 Add hops per schedule.
 Now on to the peppers.
 Of the 3 peppers I use, the order of heat is Cayenne, Jalapeno, and Hungarian.
 The Hungarian peppers look like yellow elongated bell peppers and are very mild in heat and flavor.
 Use approximately 75% of the peppers during the brewing process..using all of the cayenne and hungarian, and about 1/2 of the jalapeno.
 You can slice or rip apart the peppers.
 Ripping them apart releases more oils than cutting the peppers (don't rub your eyes!!!).
 Add the peppers in the last 3 minutes of the boil.
 Save the boiled peppers and (now that they are sanitized) place them into the primary.
 When transfering to the secondary ferment, slice/rip up the remaining jalapeno peppers, boil them in about 3 cups of water then add them to the secondary.
 Enjoy!!
 Original Gravity 1.069
 Terminal Gravity 1.017
 Color 9.80 °SRM
 Bitterness 18.1 IBU
 Alcohol (%volume) 6.8 %Ain't that a Bitch
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   Any tasting notes?
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   Well was it a good balance?



