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North American Clone Brews Homebrew Recipes for Your Favorite American and Canadian Beers




Well over 100 extract, mini-mash, and all-grain recipes that will allow homebrewers to duplicate their favorite award-winning American and Canadian microbrewery beers.

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars Good, yes. Perfect, not quite
There are a few problems with this book, as already stated elsewhere. However, this is a very good book to get you very close to your favorites brews. I’ve done 5 recipes from this book, and have been pleased with all of them except the Fat Tire clone (try #2 is in the secondary). It saves a lot of research time trying to formulate your own clone recipe. It also is educational.

4 Stars Decent book, unfairly reviewed
While there are mistakes in this book (as there are in Clone Brews and Beer Captured), overall this is a worthwhile book-all the recipes I have made from this book have turned out well.

Much of the criticism of this book seems overdone. Beerman11, for instance, says that the extract version of the Immortales recipe asks you to continue the recipe with mini-mash recipe, and that this would require boiling 7.5 gallons. In my copy, the extract recipe asks you to use the mini-mash recipe after the boil–which would result in a boil of 3 gallons.

Admittedly, some of the criticism is fair. The book does not suggest lowering the amount of hops for the all-grain recipes, which is odd. I could not find the barleywine error mentioned elsewhere (although I’m not a big barleywine fan); it is possible mistakes in the first edition were corrected. On the other hand, Russell did actually include lagering in his recipes, which the Szamatulski’s did not in Clone Brews (and included only in the Helpful Hints section in Beer Captured, their latest book).

Frankly, I suspect many of the problems with this book are a result of the publishing format, which applies to both of the Szamatulski’s books as well. The short, one-page recipe format doesn’t leave enough room to discuss technique and other issues involved with making the beer, and I think a lot of useful information is left out. However, I can get this information elsewhere.

Overall, I liked this book better than the original Clone Brews and almost as much as Beer Captured.

1 Star Give the brewer a break
I bought this book and I am having a hard time with it. I have been an extract brewer for 15 years. I’m responding to “sioux181″ when he says “Give a guy a break!”, give the brewer a break. I bought the ingredients for two of the recipes in this book and when I started making them, I realized that the conversions he made from mini-mash to extract were incorrect and I had to guess at what to do. How can I give the author a break? I will admit that mistakes happen, but you sound like you must be the author because any homebrewer would be very upset with incorrect information on brewing a beer. Both the errors that were pointed out previously are pretty obvious. However, I don’t think the author spent the time to correctly convert to extract. For the Immortale recipe I start with 3 gallons of water for the specialty grains, he tells us to omit some ingredients, then follow the mini-mash recipe. It wasn’t until I started that I looked at the mini-mash recipe and it said to sparge with 4 1/2 gallons of water. I have never brewed an extract beer using a 7 1/2 gallon boil (for a 5 gallon batch). The other recipe I made was Whale Tale Brown Ale, with his recipe I would end up with a 5 gallon boil. If I wanted to do a 5 gallon boil, I would switch to all-grain. It is obvious that the conversions are incorrect. Every recipe is like this. I have to guess at how much water to use for the specialty grains and sparging. Also, among various other small but important pieces that are essential to brewing, he has completely forgotten about adding Irish Moss.

4 Stars Worth Buying
I’m glad I read my copy of North American Clone Brews before reading the reviews in this column. Give a guy a break! The book is fine. It does what it purports in a concise and readable manner. So, yes, “White Plains”, Mr Russell’s book contains a typo. Obviously he did not mean to mash (by my calculations) 16.75 lbs grain in 2.5 gallons of water. Mistakes happen. As to reduce the bittering in a full boil: to many variables affect hop utilization (at best 30%) to worry about this. Keep it simple. Relax, don’t worry….”White Plains” and his admirer from Texas clearly have some axe to grind. Odd that with all the “many errors” in the book both ‘reviewers’ point out the same two-and both got the weight wrong. The variety and scope of this book alone justify its purchase. Having examined the quality of the recipes, I plan to do my brewing this season exclusively from North American Clone Brews.

5 Stars So Many Recipes! So Few Fermenters
I love this book. It is informative, original and full of some very good recipes. There are great instructions for the both beginner and seasoned brewer. There is a good variety of easy recipes and just enough variety in the complex brews to keep you busy for months. Each recipe has a complete header of beer specifics. Great for the beginner who wants to move beyond the basics.

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Make Your Own Moonshine Homebrew Still

Make Your Own Moonshine Homebrew Still




Building a Home Distillation Apparatus 1999. 45 pages. Table of Contents:
FOREWORD ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 1
INTRODUCTION…………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 1
WHERE TO START?………………………………………………………………………………………………… 3
WHAT KIND OF STILL?………………………………………………………………………………………….. 5
CONSTRUCTION…………………………………………………………………………………………………… 10
BUILDING THE CONDENSER ……………………………………………………………………………….. 13
BUILDING THE REFLUX COLUMN ………………………………………………………………………. 19
HEATING CONSIDERATIONS……………………………………………………………………………….. 25
PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER……………………………………………………………………………….. 27
APPENDICES………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 2
LICENSE AGREEMENT…………………………………………………………………………………………… 3
HOW TO APPLY THE LICENSE AGREEMENT……………………………………………………….. 8
MATERIAL LIST……………………………………………………………………………………………………… 9
TOOLS………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 10
INDEX…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 11

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India Pale Ale Homebrew Class Homebrew classics



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Designing Great Beers The Ultimate Guide to Brewing Classic Beer Styles




Part 1 of Designing Great Beers is a complete book in itself, focused solely on home-brewing ingredients and techniques (including three superb chapters on hops alone). Ray Daniels proves himself the “techie” type, infusing his introductory chapters with as much brewing math as brewing lore. Yet, Daniels never hops off the deep end of beer geekdom. Instead, he complements this emphasis on data with the creative use of graphics; where one could get bogged down in the stats, there is usually a clear visual depiction to instantly summarize their meaning.

This focus on facts continues into part 2 of Daniels’s guide, where it backs an admirably pragmatic take on beer styles and their importance in home-brewing. Daniels devotes a chapter to each of 14 major style categories, detailing historical origins and modern brewing techniques. He lays a contemporary groundwork by compiling and analyzing the recipes of the National Homebrew Competition’s most successful beers. The assumption is that beers deemed representative of particular beer styles in modern competitions serve as ideal models for recipe creation. Among the information provided for each style is a chart showing the percentage of brewers using each type of grain and in what proportions the grains were added. Similar data are supplied for hop varieties, yeast strains, and water treatment. This reverse engineering of award-winning beers naturally benefits experienced brewers seeking to wow judges at the next competition. Yet, even brewers taking their first shy steps into creating their own recipes have much to gain from this kind of practical analysis. Daniels provides the basic tools a brewer of any level can use to formulate recipes with confidence and creativity. –Todd Gehman

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Great book for the serious home/craft brewer
This book is amazingly well written and immediately applicable for either the home brewer or small craft brewery. It’s not for beginners wanting to copy down some easy recipes. Instead, it is a great compilation of equations, tables and facts that will greatly help the consistency, quality and authenticity of the beer you produce. So if you are looking for a book that will help you construct a grain bill for your award winning stout or trying to figure out how much gypsum you need for that porter, this book is for you. I wish I bought this book years ago!

5 Stars Brewing Bible
Very good book with many recipes and very techical notes on brewing classic beer styles

5 Stars Must have book for any brewer
I picked this book up on the recommendation of others and I’m glad I did. It is a bit dated but the information is timeless. This book will not teach a beginner the steps to brew, it teaches the whys not the hows. This should be required reading before any brewer advances to all-grain.

3 Stars Good book but might be getting outdated now
A very useful and informative book, packed with lots of great in-depth detail, covering a wide range of information from historic beer-brewing facts and analysis through to modern home-brewing techniques and tips.

However, a substantial portion of the information provided focuses on ‘NHC Second-Round Beer’ and what (home) brewers used (or did not use) in their entries into the second-round of the NHC Competition. So much so that at times it almost seems like a statistical analysis of the competition entries. Given that the data is about 10 years old now and is focused on only a small sample, I do wonder how relevant that portion of information is now and what may have changed since.

5 Stars Excellent guide for designing your own recipes
This is a great book for the advanced brewer who is tired of blindly following recipes.

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A Year of Beer 260 Seasonal Homebrew Recipes

A Year of Beer 260 Seasonal Homebrew Recipes




Each chapter begins with a description of a beer style, with recipes for every level of brewer–from extract to all-grain.

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars Not the best for beginners
Most of these recipes are all grain. Not a great idea for beginning brewers. But a great idea if you are thinking about making the move up to all grain. A creative brewer could probably make many of them into extract recipes.

The best part is helping you figure out the best the brew for the time of the year. Over all, a fine book.

5 Stars A lot of good recipies.
Recipies from award winning homebrews. There are a lot of good recipies in here and a lot that it’s hard to imagine that they won anything at all. Regardless of the material the author did a great job compiling all of the recipies and presents it well in this edition. A must have for homebrewers.

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