Beer Brewing :: Icky Beer Pictures

in beer •  7 years ago  (edited)

I made beer this past Sunday, as I find myself doing every couple weeks.

This weekend's creation was a Blonde ale using just Centennial hops.

A blonde ale is a light, simple style of beer, but more flavorful than a typical macro lager or 'lite' beer. I do like hoppy beers, so I added more Centennial hops than is typically normal for a blonde ale. Centennial is one of many dozens of hop varieties, but is one of the more popular. Tasting of citrus with floral and lemon notes, it works great in almost any beer and paired with other hops. Since I enjoy it, I'm using it alone.

That said, two days after adding my yeast I have some wonderfully disgusting fermentation going on.


Always happy to see bubbly pillows like this, since it means my yeast is alive and doing their job. I used a package of Wyeast Northwest Ale yeast here that was...nearly a year old. Not ideal, but it's still alive and kicking!


Mmm...squishy.





Photos by @negativer.

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All that yeasty goodness lends more complexity to the finished product. Not a big hops fan but I do love a Hefeweizen ... would you consider that a blonde?

Not at all, my good lady. A blonde ale is really just a more flavorful version of a generic lager (Bud/Miller/etc). Great for drinking when you're working, just got in from mowing the lawn, etc. But it's all barley malt.

A proper Hefeweizen (which I love too) is mostly wheat malt, very low on hops, not bitter at all, and is a different beer entirely. There aren't a ton of blonde ales on the market to do a side by side, but if you had them side by side...you'd notice the difference :)

Great answer ... thank you:)

Looks yummy! In a souffle sort of way, that is. Could pass it as a casserole dessert and none would be the wiser.

I admit at times I'm tempted to dip a big spoon into it and take a mouthful...but I kind of already know that would end badly.

Oh? How badly? The obvious flatulence, sure, but taste wise?

It tastes bready, but all the pools of yeast at the top make it feel really...slimy. I've touched it, and it's like the lumpy parts of egg-drop soup, but probably more gross if you put it in your mouth.

Ha! Icky indeed.

Makes me think back many years ago when I shocked the kids by pouring beer into my pancake batter; the batter was better for it! I wonder what your beer yeast in the working stages would do to bread makings.

I think the beer carbonation also makes it lighter and fluffier, but I don't know if that's scientific.

In this style, do you leave it open to the air?

Nope. I only opened my bucket to see how it was doing and take some pics. No open fermentation for me.

The is the beer equivalent of watching slaughterhouse footage.

Only if you really like slaughterhouse footage :) For me, I do like to see a good healthy fermentation.

I'm not an expert in the kitchen, I miss the basics says mom ...
but one thing I know ...
with beer everything is better!

You are right on that front! Beer makes everything better.

Oh just what I wanted to see....frothy sludge stuff. Kinda looks like vomit...

Check back in two weeks for beautiful clear golden beer photos! :)