Description
Origin Story:
I had been thinking about the Captain Beefheart song “Brickbats”, from Doc at the Radar Station. According to The Internet, a brickbat is “a piece of brick, typically when used as a weapon”, or, colloquially and more commonly, “a remark or comment which is highly critical and typically insulting.” It’s a great word. It’s a great song. It deserved a beer.
This coincided with an urge to do something simple. I had gotten into a brief Pilsner phase and thought it would be fun to amp a Czech Pils up to Imperial levels, a la Mu Imperial Cream Ale. The list of ingredients for a Pils is simple—mainly Pilsner malt, Saaz hops, water, and yeast. Not a lot of froofraw to hide behind: it’s a show of technique.
Two challenges here. First, maintaining the balance between the elements of flavor: alcohol, sweetness, and bitterness. The increased grain bill needs to be paired with an increased hop bill so that it tastes appropriately, but not too, bitter. I also anticipated that I needed to balance the higher ABV with some more body, so I added some Carapils and a bit of aromatic malt to a hefty Pilsner bill. This rule-breaking will keep me from winning any awards, but that boat has sailed.
Second challenge: working with my new 10-gallon electric brew kettle. 18 pounds of grain is a lot for this vessel. Mashing 18 pounds of grain in 6 gallons of water is fine, but once the sparging brings your liquid level to the full 9 gallons you’ve got to pull the grain out really fast or you’re going to overflow. I learned this the hard way when I made Eric’s Brett Imperial Turmeric Dark Ale, and as a result I located a metal shop in Chatsworth to make me an armature that would allow me to lift my very heavy grain basket with a pulley. It works great, but my timing has to be right or I’ll make a mess of the kitchen.
With this new system, I’ve been having some trouble with my efficiency—with this amount of grain I would have expected an 8.7% ABV, and after fermentation this has topped out at 6.8%. It remains quite generous for a Pils, and it’s spicy and delicious.
Somewhere along the way it occurred to me that since this was a Czech Pils, it deserved a Czech name. If I can trust Google Translate, the Czech word for “insult” is “urážka”, which has a great ring. It makes the label art of literal brickbats—inspired by some street art we saw on a walk with Henry in Queens this summer, and executed by Yaci from Spain—a bit more confounding.
Music Pairing:
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