Honey beer
Honey beer
Hi guys, I'm just about to attempt a honey wheat beer (inspired by Beez Neez of Matilda Breweries) and need some help. I'm going to use a Coopers Bavarian with Coopers brew blend #2 and throw in some honey. I've bought some organic honey from the supermarket and was going to throw that in as well. The guy at the homebrew shop told me to put in about 300g of honey and boil it dissolved in water for 30 minutes. My questions are:
1. Is this the best way to prepare the honey to ensure no contamination?
2. Is that enough honey? (The guy at the homebrew shop didn't like honey beers, so he may have been a bit light on with the honey.)
3. Is this organic honey OK?
Thanks for your help.
1. Is this the best way to prepare the honey to ensure no contamination?
2. Is that enough honey? (The guy at the homebrew shop didn't like honey beers, so he may have been a bit light on with the honey.)
3. Is this organic honey OK?
Thanks for your help.
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Nathan
I use about 500 ml to 750 ml Honey in a batch and I add a little bit more hops (0.25 oz) to the boil. I then use the remaining 0.75 oz as a dry hop, (I addit to the primary when I dump in the boil and then cool down when I add the remaining cool water.
Dogger
I use about 500 ml to 750 ml Honey in a batch and I add a little bit more hops (0.25 oz) to the boil. I then use the remaining 0.75 oz as a dry hop, (I addit to the primary when I dump in the boil and then cool down when I add the remaining cool water.
Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
i've done a few brews with honey & it really depends what type of honey your using. the last one i did i used 1kg of orange blossom honey & i can barely taste it.. the one before this i used 500g of beechworth honey & found the results to be much better. it really depends on the taste of the honey - with darker, stronger tasting honeys the flavour seems to stand out alot better than milder, lighter honeys..
as far as i know there really isnt any need to boil honey (altho i do a quick 10min boil anyways)
as far as i know there really isnt any need to boil honey (altho i do a quick 10min boil anyways)
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Actually,
and not to be a dick, you should boil the honey to release the albumin (yeh, that white stuff) at our levels it is not huge but if you ever get into mead...... MMMMMM nectar of the gods
The other part is to kill all that crap that is sitting on the bees arse to that happens to bobbing around your boil too.
Crap, am I ever paranoid, what ever happened to the dump and go days LOL
Dogger
and not to be a dick, you should boil the honey to release the albumin (yeh, that white stuff) at our levels it is not huge but if you ever get into mead...... MMMMMM nectar of the gods
The other part is to kill all that crap that is sitting on the bees arse to that happens to bobbing around your boil too.
Crap, am I ever paranoid, what ever happened to the dump and go days LOL
Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
interesting dogger.. never heard of albumin. i think i'll have to do some reading up on this
havent actually tried mead.. keen to tho.
re sanitization, honey is a natural antibiotic.. not 100% sure but check this:
http://www.honey.com/pressrm/IFT/2003/s ... ality.html
& this:
Honey's Antimicrobial Properties and Benefits to Wound Healing
The use of honey as a wound dressing goes back to ancient times and has now been "rediscovered" by modern medicine, according to Dr. Peter Molan of the University of Waikato, New Zealand. "It is a common observation in the many reports in medical journals that numerous benefits result from using honey to dress wounds," says Dr. Molan. The antibacterial properties of honey may help clear infection in wounds, and the anti-inflammatory action of honey may reduce pain and may improve circulation which hastens the healing process. According to Dr. Molan, "Honey stimulates the re-growth of tissue involved in healing, making healing faster and reducing scarring."
from: http://www.honey.com/pressrm/research/nutri.html
if it helps clear infections in wounds i dunno how much i'd be worrying about the crap from bees arses

re sanitization, honey is a natural antibiotic.. not 100% sure but check this:
http://www.honey.com/pressrm/IFT/2003/s ... ality.html
& this:
Honey's Antimicrobial Properties and Benefits to Wound Healing
The use of honey as a wound dressing goes back to ancient times and has now been "rediscovered" by modern medicine, according to Dr. Peter Molan of the University of Waikato, New Zealand. "It is a common observation in the many reports in medical journals that numerous benefits result from using honey to dress wounds," says Dr. Molan. The antibacterial properties of honey may help clear infection in wounds, and the anti-inflammatory action of honey may reduce pain and may improve circulation which hastens the healing process. According to Dr. Molan, "Honey stimulates the re-growth of tissue involved in healing, making healing faster and reducing scarring."
from: http://www.honey.com/pressrm/research/nutri.html
if it helps clear infections in wounds i dunno how much i'd be worrying about the crap from bees arses

Matty,
had a bit more of a look around honey.com last night and it seems dogger is right..
http://www.honey.com/recipes/beer/
this ones also an interesting read:
http://www.nhb.org/download/factsht/beer.pdf
had a bit more of a look around honey.com last night and it seems dogger is right..
http://www.honey.com/recipes/beer/
this ones also an interesting read:
http://www.nhb.org/download/factsht/beer.pdf
Just as an aside, many of the honey manufacturers are using antibiotics on the bees. I really don't see the issue but I am not sure if anyone else has concerns.
It doesn't seem to affect the fermentation and definately not the taste. The only thing I see is a very small grain size floculation of yeast which has an electrostatic charge (clings to the side of the fermentor)
Dogger
It doesn't seem to affect the fermentation and definately not the taste. The only thing I see is a very small grain size floculation of yeast which has an electrostatic charge (clings to the side of the fermentor)
Dogger
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Hi guys
I'm about to start on a honey beer this week. Getting together the ingredients and the info.
Saw Doggers comments about boiling the honey but then
Looked at DB's url
http://www.honey.com/recipes/beer/
and found that it suggests not boiling the honey.
Does boiling reduce the flavour?
BK
I'm about to start on a honey beer this week. Getting together the ingredients and the info.
Saw Doggers comments about boiling the honey but then
Looked at DB's url
http://www.honey.com/recipes/beer/
and found that it suggests not boiling the honey.
Hmmmm ... confusion.Boiling the wort effectively destroys these enzymes along with any yeasts or bacteria that may have survived to this stage. If honey were added to the boiling wort, there is little doubt that it would be rendered sterile and enzymatically deactivated. Unfortunately, it would also likely be rendered without much positive contribution of flavor to the beer
Does boiling reduce the flavour?
BK
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- Joined: Monday Dec 06, 2004 11:55 am
- Location: Melbourne
I made a Coopers Canadia Blonde with honey as per the recipe on the Coopers site. I couldn't find the exact honey they used so I used an organic light honey. It is quite sweet and not much to my liking but my girlfriend and all her friends love it. I have tried Beez Neez and that is a pretty good drop. If anyone has a recipe that is close to that it would be good if they could post it.
Cheers Dory
Cheers Dory
1 x Coopers Bitter
1 kg Dextrose
500gm Malt
500gm Honey
750ml 100% Orange Juice
3 tbs Cinnamon Powder
throw it all in your fermenter add 2ltrs boiling water & stir top up to 22ltrs
use a fermenter with some room at the top as this really froths up during fementation
also takes a while to settle the sediment
i posted this in the beer u buy section
1 kg Dextrose
500gm Malt
500gm Honey
750ml 100% Orange Juice
3 tbs Cinnamon Powder
throw it all in your fermenter add 2ltrs boiling water & stir top up to 22ltrs
use a fermenter with some room at the top as this really froths up during fementation
also takes a while to settle the sediment
i posted this in the beer u buy section
Last edited by longlux on Wednesday Jan 05, 2005 10:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Joined: Thursday Aug 26, 2004 10:43 am
- Location: Lucan, Ontario, Canada
Hey all,
On reccomendations from my HBS I have brewed up a Blackrock IPA, to which I added 300 grams of Leatherwood honey. As you know this is a Tasmania honey, and suprisingly enough I have what I consider to be a very good Grolsch clone. I would definately reccomend it to anyone.
Cracked a few bottles at New Years, and couldn't stop my mates drinking the stuff.
Contents:
-1 Can Blackrock East India Pale Ale
-300 grams Leatherwood honey (from health food shop)
-600 grams sugar (you can sub with Dex or brew Coopers Brew Enhancer)
-Top up fermenter to 18 litres
Came up beutiful, with that spicy coriander Grolsch taste, with a really great golden color.
Cheers.
On reccomendations from my HBS I have brewed up a Blackrock IPA, to which I added 300 grams of Leatherwood honey. As you know this is a Tasmania honey, and suprisingly enough I have what I consider to be a very good Grolsch clone. I would definately reccomend it to anyone.
Cracked a few bottles at New Years, and couldn't stop my mates drinking the stuff.
Contents:
-1 Can Blackrock East India Pale Ale
-300 grams Leatherwood honey (from health food shop)
-600 grams sugar (you can sub with Dex or brew Coopers Brew Enhancer)
-Top up fermenter to 18 litres
Came up beutiful, with that spicy coriander Grolsch taste, with a really great golden color.
Cheers.
Cheers,
Paul
Paul
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- Posts: 3168
- Joined: Thursday Aug 26, 2004 10:43 am
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