Sunday, August 12, 2012

NoBBC3!!

That's right, ultrafans, it's the 3rd annual
Night of Beer Bread & Cheese!


This year's celebration will again feature draught and bottled Two Tun brews, plus Formaggio Kitchen artisan cheeses and handmade and local snacks and treats.  We'll be chompin' and chewin' on the best of the best, and if you remember it at all, it'll be a night to remember.  Remember the NoBBC creedo: 'Come hungry, leave drunk!'  So scope the suds lineup already:


TongueSpank IPA
a balls-to-the-wall west-coast style IPA

Rye Guy Lager
an easy-drinkin, cherry-smoked, brown rye lager

Bill's Blossoms wet-hop Pale Ale
pale ale brewed with fresh-off-the-bine Cascade hops from Dartmouth, MA

Virgin's Trial Stout
a roasty, toasty black stout brewed with 3lbs of rum-soaked cherries

Oaked Double IPA
a dry-hopped, oak & vanilla-aged robust IPA

Belle Jenn Ale
Belgian-style strong brown ale



Now for the deets:
Get down with us on Saturday, September 29, 6-12pm - Forest Hills, Jamaica Plain
For tickets, email your brewmaster at TwoTunBrewery@gmail.com
(These tickets go faster than fresh IPA!)

Monday, April 30, 2012

TAPLIST April




CURRENT BREWS:


Rye Guy Lager 4.9%ABV (batch 81)
One of only a few lagers to come ot of Two Tun, this one is brewed with chocolate rye and rye malt, and finished with some cherry-smoked barley.  Lagered at 48 degreesF.  Smooth and clean, with big presence for a session beer.  Almost gone!

Honey IPA 7.5%AVB (batch 82)
Haven't conjured a name for this one yet.  Brewed with a touch of oats and a whole slew of wildflower honey, and hopped up the yin yang with a few pounds of Cascade and Sorachi Ace.

IN FERMENTATION:

Four Stitch Porter 6.8%ABV (batch 83)
The 13th batch of 4SP, this robust vanilla porter gets luckier every time!  10 gallons in about 10 more days.


Farmhouse Honey IPA 7.5%AVB (batch 82)
Same recipe as above, fermented warm with a Belgian saison yeast strain.  Zang!


UP NEXT IN THE KETTLE:

It's a galdang mystery!  You'll have to salivate and see...






Cheers!




Just words this time


We’ve all heard Knowledge is Power, so ready yourself to get juiced like Bane with a shot of learnin' to your thinkpiece!



.....everyone still on board?
It occurred to me, (and every other brewer ever since civilization,) that our respected public basically knows shit about suds, and the black magic that is fermentation.  Well fear not good people of Earth!  Stevie B is here to set the record straight with a brief biography of beer, in currently-hoisting-a-pint-friendly idiot prose to satisfy the most laydrunk amongst you.
So what the hell is beer made of, you collectively moan?  I’ll shoot straight with you, there aint a lot behind the curtain here, cuz beer is thus: malt, hops, water, yeast.  Now let’s get malty!

(Before I dig into this bucket o barley, let me disclaim: for those of you lookin’ and a hopin’ for an engineering-meets-biochem intensive, look elsewhere with that snotty ivy-league sweatervest you’re wearing!  If you want to talk Alpha acid and Beta-amylase, visit the brewery and we’ll get literate over a pint.)  So malt.  Malt is just cereal grain that’s been allowed to sprout in water, and then kilned so it won’t grow.  Easy right?  We brewfolk prefer barley, but you can add adjuncts to your heart’s content (DANGER! DANGER! More on adjuncts later…)  Grind up some malt, add water and heat, and you wind up converting its starch to sugar.  Or MAGIC as I prefer it.  You can cook up your mash to make simple sugars or complex sugars, and this means dry beer or sweet beer.  Now you’ve got a bigass pot of sugary porridge; the hard part is getting the sugar water out of the grain.  Again skipping crucial information for the sake of fun, your sugar water, ‘wort’, is now boiling away in the kettle, released from its cereal shackles and it’s time to add the hops!

Hops are flowers that grow on a perennial bine (not a spelling error, hops are not a vine).  They’re green, and when ripe, loaded with a sticky, yellow, resinous powder: lupulin.  Hops are added to the boil in relatively small amounts at key, strategic, clandestine times.  Wort is usually boiled for at least an hour, so if you add hops early, they’ll add bitterness to your brew, and later additions add flavor and aroma.  You see, that hussy lupulin won’t bitter your beer unless it’s allowed to get busy for close to an hour, so you need to kick back, excuse the chaperones and let them work it out.  When you only boil em for just a few minutes, they give up their aromatic and flavanoid traits, so you don’t get bitter, just flowery.  You’ll be bitter to know that people have segregated hops in this day and age.  For good reason actually.  Some hops are more floral (think grassy, piney, citrusy) and some are more herbal (earthy, spicy).  Some lend themselves to bittering better or aroma better.  Some like to have too many at the bar and then ask your girl to dance.  Hops are fickle.

Yeast!?!  Exactly.  Yeast is to beer what geography is to speech.  If you travel somewhere else, they’ll have an accent.  Or talk French.  Once your hopped-up wort has cooled down, you can add a couple o hundred million yeast cells to start fermentation.  Yeast gets the party started by eating the sugar in the wort and crapping out CO2 and lovely, lovely alcohol!  There’s a little more to it than that.  While the yeast is chowing down, it’s also releasing all manner of nonsense along with the good stuff.  Esters, phenols, acetyldehyde and giant squid are just a few.  It’s these organic compounds that make hefeweizen taste like bananas, or German lagers to taste like a skunk sphincter.  They all prefer different temperatures, different sugar contents, and different astrological signs.  It’s all quite complicated, you should probably leave it to the experts (glug glug glug!)

Water.  Are we really having this conversation?  You know it, I know it, we all love it.

Adjuncts look like the end of the line.  A grim fate for any beer.  But wait!  It’s not just rice and corn?  There are other options?  Options like maple syrup, honey, rye, wheat, oats, and vegetables?  But of course, you old fool!  In this here day n age, we brewing with all manner of fun schtuff that doesn’t dumb down flavor, body, or philosophical integrity.  Adjuncts are taking their rightful place in the sun.  Hell, I just brewed a batch of IPA with wildflower honey and oats.  The rye’s the limit!  (Too much… too much).

And there you have it, ladies and germs!  Unfiltered beer knowledge, fresh on tap!  As usual, drop a line at TwoTunBrewery@gmail.com, get friendly at facebook.com/TwoTunBrewery, or hit up our little brewery with big flavor in JP for a pint on draught!

Sunday, February 19, 2012

NoSB: a Retrospecitve

Hindsight is never 20/20 when you're wearing official D.A.R.E. drunk goggles, yet again I forsook the camera for a pint during the NoSB (No Shitty Beer, according to some).  What I did manage to capture was mostly prep, so have a gander, friends.  And no, I haven't been sleeping it off since the Night, I'm a busy guy, what with all the procrastinating I've had to do.  Beggars can't be boozers after all... or is that right?
gruyere...                                                      and gruyere
the local queso spread
fixins for soft pretzels                                    and some 'bellitas
the fondue victims
toasting ground cashew for the shrooms
filling: caramelized onion, ricotta, parmesan, cashew and mushroom stems





And there was beer.  And the brewer tasted the beer and saw that it was good.  And the brewer called it ale, and divided it from the lager.  And thus was born Batch #79: ye olde Gruit ale.  And it had many herbs and great flavor and much alcohol; and from its hulls was conjured a light lager, to be chilled for months on end and enjoyed whilst reaping one's lawn in the temperate season.  And there were pictures, and they looked thusly:





Wednesday, January 11, 2012

All ground up and nowhere to flow! (More Night of Stronge Biere propaganda)

On Sunday I brewed the last of the three big bad beers for the NoSB.  I cooked up 10 gallons of Double Hop Salad, with almost 40 lbs of malt and a full 2 lbs of Cascade hops!  The fermenters have been chugging away for over three days now, and this one looks like it'll weigh in right around 9% ABV.

Furthermore your Honor, today I kegged 10 gallons of Belle Jenn Ale: our slick and seductive, highly instructive, always hoppy, never sloppy Belgian (style) strong amber ale.  Just like it's namesake, this beer ain't no foolin round, but it likes to git down!

Lasty but never leasty, your favorite brewmaster has been hoarding some BIG ED Imperial Stout for the NoSB.  This bad larry is a plain ol' palate-crackin', shale frackin', face-smackin', asphalt jackin' dark beer that would satisfy Special Agent Dale Cooper's knack for black.  In all seriousness, no bedrock was harmed in the making of this monsta beer-'n'-a-half.

Feeling a little tipsy already?  Have a sip of water, count to ten, go to your happy place, then scope the sneak peak of the NoSB ticket!  See you pretty people on the 28th!  (Only 408 hours to go!)
Sincerely and Dearly,
Stevie B

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

TAPLIST January & Night of Stronge Biere!!!

Before I get to what's bottlin and what's draftin in the brewery, a quick word on the upcoming Night of Stronge Biere on January 28th: AWESOMEFULNESS.  Nuff said?  Maybe not: Join us for Two Tun's midwinter celebration of strong beers, rich food, and red cheeks.  All ales over 8% ABV.  All food: artisan, local, organic, fair trade, equal opportunity, whole grain, multiracial, bilingual, bipartisan and probably pretty damned fattening.  All guests: drunk!  Tickets now, email TwoTunBrewery@gmail.com.

(Don't like bottles?  Put our draught lines to work! We're in JP for shits sake!)

CURRENT BREWS:

Four Stitch Porter 6.8%ABV (batch 74)
The 11th batch of 4SP, this is a robust vanilla porter that practically drinks itself.  A Two Tun favorite.

BIG ED Imperial Stout 9.2%ABV (batch 69)
A thick, rich, black ale.  Brewed with pound upon pound of chocolate, coffee and caramel malts, and generously kettle-hopped.  Fermented with a clean British yeast, split in two batches and aged for a few months (half with well-toasted white oak) and reblended.  This will be killing it on draught and bottles at the
NoSB!

Belgian-style Sweet Rye Ale 5.9%AVB (batch 71)
A dessert-style ale, fermented with a Belgian farmhouse yeast notorious for quitting while the beer is still sweet.  Tell reisling to take a hike!

IN FERMENTATION:

Belle Jenn Ale 8.4%ABV (batch 75)
A ruby red, well-hopped Belgian-style strong ale.  A richly balanced love triangle of  caramel malts, grassy hops and pungent Belgian yeast.  Dry, with a sweet, smooth finish.  Another contender at the NoSB.

UP NEXT IN THE KETTLE:

Hop Salad DOUBLE IPA 9%ABV (batch 76)
'Salad never lasts longer than a lamb shakes its ass, but this batch is Imperialized!  Normally 6.2%, the recipe has been boosted with extra malt and blasted with extra Cascade hops.  Fresh for the NoSB, guaranteed to please those of you who still have lips after TongueSpank!

More pictures?  I oblige...
     
A visit to see the folks in Fort Worth with a sister from San Fran makes this one happy brewmaster, but it's nice to be home where the Hop Salad and 4-Stitch roam.

I hate to say it, but I'd rather not spray it.  That's it for now, you know how to get in touch.  See you on the 28th!

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

TAPLIST December

Per savvy reader request (cheers E!), the first in a regular post format: current beers (while they last).



CURRENT BREWS

TongueSpank IPA 7.1%ABV(batch 72)
A brand new, superhopped IPA, loaded to the gills with citra and cascade for a seriously piney, floral, grapefruit flavor.  Nice and pale, not killer bitter.

Rye Guy Ale 6.5%ABV (batch 71)
A smooth table ale brewed with 33% malted rye for a smooth, round flavor.  Nicely cloudy from the rye and American yeast.

Belgian-style Sweet Rye Ale 5.9%AVB (batch 71)
A sweet, dessert-style ale, fermented with a Belgian farmhouse yeast notorious for quitting while the beer is still sweet.  This is a fun beer to blend into others on tap, too.

Belle Jenn Ale 8.4%ABV (batch 70)
A ruby red, well-hopped Belgian-style strong ale.  A richly balanced love triangle of  caramel malts, grassy hops and pungent Belgian yeast.  Dry, with a sweet, smooth finish.

BIG ED Imperial Stout 9.2%ABV (batch 69)
A thick, rich, black ale.  Brewed with pound upon pound of chocolate, coffee and caramel malts, and generously kettle-hopped.  Fermented with a clean British yeast, split in two batches and aged for a few months (half with well-toasted white oak).  Re-blended, and ready for the winter holidays.  Phew!

IN FERMENTATION

Hop Salad IPA 6.2%ABV (batch 73)
A favorite since its introduction in January last year, this is the 6th batch, each brewed with pounds of hops, and a handful of caramel malt for a smooth balance.  Ready in a week, get it while it lasts!

UP NEXT IN THE KETTLE

Four Stitch Porter 6.8%ABV
The 11th batch of 4SP, this is a robust vanilla porter that practically drinks itself.  Another Two Tun favorite.

Get your lips on it!  TwoTunBrewery@gmail.com.  Cheers!
-Stevie B