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November 22, 2016

Punch Down Beer

This is a follow up post to the "Modifying a Barrel" post.

In the beginning of October I put 40 gallons of 18 month old "Méthode Lambic" beer on to 80 lbs of wild blackcap raspberries. These berries were foraged from the woods of the Driftless region by the crew at Forager Brewing. I can only imagine the dedication that is required to harvest 80 lbs of these tiny little berries.

In preparation for making this beer, I had to figure out how to fruit it. With only 80 lbs of fruit, I knew I needed a ~50 gallon vessel for fruiting. Using a modified barrel would be a perfect vessel, but presented a set of its own hurdles. The biggest of which were 1.) how to empty the beer when it's finished, and 2.) how to prevent too much oxygen exposure.

The fruit screen pictured in the previous post was my answer to issue #1, and it worked perfectly. I was a bit nervous about how much these small berries would disintegrate during secondary fermentation.


I attached an in-line strainer to make sure the beer came out clean and to get an idea of what would make it through the fruit sieve. As hoped, the fruit bed itself becomes a strain and captures most all of the fine particulates. 

I was able to completely empty the barrel without the strainer clogging, and this was all that made it through. Just a collection of raspberry seeds. If you've ever emptied beer off fruit, you know this is pretty incredible. The fruit bed was completely dry, which means I probably captured a good 5-10% more beer than I would have otherwise, and with a beer this expensive, that is going to pay off immediately.  We have made these available through Stainless Brewing and can be ordered here:
http://www.stainlessbrewing.com/Funk-Factory-Fruit-Screen_p_340.html

Issue #2, oxygen exposure. This was my biggest fear, and the aspect beer people voiced concern about the most. I know punch downs are common in the wine world and O2 exposure is as much of a concern for them as it is us. I also believe the wine world has much more experience when it comes to to fruit and there are lessons that the beer world can learn from them, even if they are scary at first.

So, even though I was afraid I'd ruin the beer, I trusted the concept.  During the secondary fermentation, I punched down the cap twice daily. It was a very gratifying experience. I did CO2 blanket the top prior to fermentation starting, and at one point after fermentation even push CO2 through the drain port.  



But maybe most importantly, after fermentation was finished and I was done with my daily punch down regimine, I put a sheet of plastic over the top of the barrel and used extra barrel hoops to secure it to the sides of the barrel.


While I know gas was able to escape, I was very encouraged to see water droplets form on the top of the plastic sheet inside the barrel. I believe this means the gas mixture inside the barrel was not exchanging with the air outside the barrel at any significant rate. More to the point, the CO2 was staying inside the barrel.

The result.



Look at that color! The aroma and flavor are equally as amazing. I am 100% sold on punch-downs as well as black-cap raspberries. It was an incredibly expensive and laborious process, but the resulting beer is mind blowing.

Thank you again to Forager Brewing for this collaboration experience and the idiotic amount of trust.

(This beer will be ready Spring of 2017 and due to the limited amount will not likely see public release, sorry)

8 comments:

  1. I really enjoyed reading this post, big fan. Keep up the good work.

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  2. Levi -

    Im considering doing this as well - Id love to be able to fruit small amounts of our beers. Im wondering if youve had more experience with this setup since you posted last fall and have any additional tips?

    Thanks for sharing as always -

    Brian

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  3. @Brian-

    I've gotten more adventurous with O2 exposure. I think we fear it more than we should.

    Other than that, everything still holds true. Get the fruit screen though!

    Cheers.

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  4. Do you believe that this concept could be accomplished in a large stainless kettle? I was thinking of trying a 20 gallon kettle with a screen and covering with plastic as you did above. I have been looking for a way to fruit single 10-20 gallon batches and this seems to be a possiblity.

    Additionaly, I have several questions regarding what you did do here.

    1. What sort of plastic are you covering with here and do you sanitize it between openings? Did you place it over the barrel once refermentation stopped or before?

    2. How long are you comfortable keeping your beer in the barrel on the fruit before you would worry about increased acetic or mold? Did you do a short contact time or months?

    3. Did you reyeast with the fruit, to insure refermentation kicked up quickly?

    Thanks for any help.

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  5. @Neil-

    Yes, you could do this in SS I suppose.

    1.) just plastic sheeting you buy at a hardware store. No sanitizing, it doesn't touch the beer. Place it over once refermentation finishes, yes.
    2.) Never worried about mold, punching down fruit prevents any risk of that. Only worry is acetic acid, but I don't think oxygen exposure is as great as we typically fear. I kept it in there for over a month.
    3.) No re-yeasting.

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  6. So the condensation on the plastic dripping back into the beer didn't cause problems?

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  7. @Levi -

    I snagged some puncheons and ordered my fruit screens - thanks for the great idea! Cant wait to fill these guys up and start turning out more fruited beers!

    Cheers -
    Brian

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