My lime and chilli beer, dubbed Elise's Spiteful Tongue, (other possible names were the Cold Englishman and the Fruity Tingle) is a stunning success! I made the beer with the juice of two limes added to the wort. When I bottled the beer I added a small chilli to half of the bottles. The result - the beers with chilli have a definate spice tingle and is not for the faint hearted somewhat overshadowing the tinge of lime. The limey beers without chilli have a light and fresh quality along with the lime overtones. A friend even likened it to cidar. As shown in the recipe below I used a mexican lager kit as I was hoping to attain a similar easy, light brew to corona, thus maximising the influence of the lime and chilli flavours
Personally I think my summer is complete. I will try a similar brew in the next few months, but with different sized chillies and observe the difference.
Recipe
Black Rock Mexican Lager
500g Dry light malt
500g Dextrose
Juice of 2 limes squeezed
Small red chillis
4.6% Alcohol
Notes:
- The chillis need to be sterilised. I used Scotch Whiskey (most strong spirits should be fine)
- You can add the chillis to the primary fermenter if you wish, but adding them to the bottle allows the production of non-spicy beer too, in case you fellow beer conniseurs do not enjoy spice.
- I've been told the size of a chilli is directly related to its spiciness the smaller the chilli the spicier it is. Keep this in mind when choosing chillis. Green chillies are much hotter than red chillies.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
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3 comments:
Following a short motorcycle expedition to Gundaroo on Sunday afternoon we sampled some of this EST brew. The spiciness of EST is significant and surprising though one may be pressed to spend a whole night on the chilli-style beer. Interestingly, the aroma derived from 3-isobutyl 2-methoxy pyrazine is dominating. This aroma is distinctive of capsicums and is a novel addition to a beer!
It's a hot one. Warms you right through! How about a similar but more winter-styled beer to keep us warm through the next chilly Canberra winter.
I have since found that the capsicum flavour varies from beer to beer. The one we drank that day was quite strong compared to some I have since
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