Brew Dudes

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Contessa Hops SMaSH Beer Tasting & Review

There’s something pure and almost meditative about doing a SMaSH beer: one malt, one hop, water, yeast. What we are seeking is to learn what a hop really brings to the beer.

This round is all about Contessa hops, US-grown “noble hop” developed by Hopsteiner. Let’s see what we learned from this experiment.

The Process

As we do for all our 1 US gallon SMaSH beer experiments, we keep it to two pounds of base malt, one ounce of hops, in this case, Contessa hops, and good old US-05 yeast.
Because of the “nobel” nature of the variety, I evenly spread the additions of the hops across the brewing process.

Contessa Hops SMaSH Beer:

  • Malt: 2 pounds of Rahr 2-row pale malt

  • Hops: 1 ounce (28 g) of Contessa hops

    • 7 g at 60 minutes to go in the boil

    • 7 g at 15 minutes to go in the boil

    • 7 g at flame-out

    • 7 g dry-hop after chilling

  • Yeast: 3 g of SafAle US-05

  • Water: 2 gallons to boil, spring water from the store

  • Procedure: 60 minute mash, 60 minute, chill, pitch yeast, ferment, dry-hop after 24 hour chill for 1 day, package

Our Tasting Notes

From the pour, Contessa delivered something interesting: herbal and green, like green tea and soft lemongrass and something floral. There’s also a light, underripe pear vibe, maybe a hint of light citrus, but nothing aggressive or juicy like your typical American “punch-you-over-the-head” hops.

In flavor, that herbal, vegetal quality carries through. Mike said it was a little reminiscent of mushrooms or a subtle forest-floor vibe, but not dank or funky. It’s more “quiet forest walk” than “pine stinky trail.” The bitterness is smooth and gentle, clean on the palate, light enough that you just keep sipping.

Our Overall Thoughts

So what do we think? Contessa hops are quiet, refined, and elegant. If you’re chasing big citrus bombs or tropical hop bombs, this hop variety is not what you are looking for.
This hop is for beer that’s subtle, drinkable, and maybe a bit contemplative. We think it would be good in light lagers, Kölsch, or a soft wheat beer or Gose.

Certainly if you are looking for a change from the typical, traditional noble hops,  give Contessa a shot. With a light malt bill, I don’t think you’ll go wrong.

Brew ON!

Cellar Science Nectar Ale Yeast APA

For a party at work, Mike brewed a 3½-gallon batch of American Pale Ale (APA) using the Cellar Science Nectar yeast. Given the task to brew a beer for a large crowd, he decided it was time to get back into the classic pale ale groove.

His goal was to capture that familiar spirit of the Sierra Nevada-style pale but play with malt percentages and yeast to deliver something a little different. Check out the results of this beer.

Nectar APA Recipe

This recipe is for a 3.5 gallon batch.

Water
Spring water with gypsum added to boil

Grain Bill
60 % American 2-row base malt
40 % Munich (~7–8 °L)

Hops
12 g of  Nugget hops added at 60 minutes to go in the boil.
56 g of Citra hops added as a whirlpool addition.
56 g of Ekuanot hops added as a whirlpool addition.
56 g of Azacca hops – cold dry hop (details below)

Yeast
1 packet of Cellar Science Nectar Dry Yeast

Procedure
Mike followed this mash schedule:
Step mash: 135 °F / 140 °F for 50 minutes
158 °F for ~10 minutes
168 °F for ~10 minutes

Boiled for 60 minutes and chilled to fermentation temperatures ~65-68 °F (basement temps).

After primary fermentation was complete, Mike cold crashed the beer to ~40-42 °F in keg, then dry hopped with Azacca hops for 5 days at the cold temperature.

Outcomes
Original Gravity: 1.052
Final Gravity: 1.012
ABV: 5.5%

What Did We Think?

We were very pleased with this beer. The aroma on transfer was off the charts with notes of pineapple and lime-citrus. The flavor had a big hop-forward profile and a clean and dry finish (despite the Munich heft).

Mike wasn’t chasing a NEIPA haze or smash-beer simplicity. He wanted a pale ale with body, character and hop punch.

The yeast performed beautifully as it fermented aggressively yet clean. The in-keg dry-hop addition of Azacca locked the hop aroma and flavor.
Mike would definitely brew this one again and may scale it up. For anyone looking to experiment with yeast beyond the usual suspects in an APA framework, give Cellar Science’s Nectar a shot.

Brew ON!

 

Is Festbier The Best Beer?

That is the question, is it?  Inspired by this year’s Miketoberfest, I snagged a promising recipe via email from Brew Your Own (BYO) magazine. Once October came around, I brewed it, kegged it, and now after about a week in the keg, we’re ready to see how it turned out.

The recipe’s named “Festbier Is the Best Beer” and it has a straightforward malt bill. Let’s take you through the recipe, brewing procedures, and how it turned out.

The Recipe

This beer is billed as “a traditional festbier to be enjoyed by the liter during Oktoberfest or any fall festivities.”

Batch size: is 5 gallons/19 L with an all grain bill

Water
Spring water from the store – no additions

Grains

It’s 50/50 Pilsner and Light Munich malt.
6 pounds (2.7 kg) of Pilsner malt – I used the fancy floor malted stuff.
6 pounds (2.7 kg) of German Munich I malt (6 ºL) – check the Lovibond, you want the light stuff

Hops
1 ounce (28 g) of Perle hops – added at 60 minutes to go in the boil.
1 ounce (28 g) of Hallertauer Tradition hops – added at 10 minutes to go in the boil.

Yeast
1 packet of  SafLager W-34/70 dry yeast

Procedures
Mashed at 150 °F (~66 °C) for 60 minutes. Boiled for 60 minutes.
Added Whirlfloc tablet at 10 minutes to go in the boil.
Chilled to 65°F (18°C) and let it ferment at basement temperatures for 2 weeks. The ambient temps of the space were around the same as the chill temperature.

Outcomes
Original Gravity: 1.056
Final Gravity: 1.010
IBUs: 28
SRM: 7 (I think a Festbier should be more like a 4)
ABV: 5.9%

Final Thoughts

So after letting it sit in-keg for about a week and pouring a sample with Mike, here’s our take: visually it’s slightly darker than I’d expected for a true pale festbier. I would rather see a deep yellow to deep gold than this light amber but that’s cosmetic.

With the aroma, you get a nice subtle spice and floral-noble hop note from the Hallertau, underlying bread and light toast from the Munich malt.

Tasting the beer, we think it turned out to be super drinkable: dry finish, light but solid malt impression with no cloying sweetness.

The carbonation is good and the clarity will improve. I’m confident the beer will sharpen further given a few more weeks. If I were to dial it in next time, I would swing the malt ratio to 75% Pilsner / 25% Munich to pull a little more of the pale gold color and lighten the malt character slightly as Mike suggested.

Ultimately though, this recipe delivered so if you’re looking for a fall lager that hits nicely without going too heavy, give this one a shot.

BREW ON!

Miketoberfest 2025 – Seasonal House Recipe Beer

Hey, it’s that time of year again and we are back with a beloved annual tradition.

It’s the one and only “Miketoberfest”, brought to you by Mike in his signature style.

If you’ve been along for the ride before, you know he recreates the classic American interpretation of Oktoberfest/festbiers.

The Miketoberfest 2025 leans harder into the malt-rich, dark-pretzel vibe.  This dude is not messing around.

Recipe Breakdown & Brew Day Process

Here is the full homebrew recipe for our 2025 Miketoberfest.
Note: this is for a 5 gallon batch.

Water:
Spring water treated to be sulfate-heavy to lift the malt.
8 g Calcium Sulfate
2 g Magnesium Sulfate
2 g Calcium Chloride 

Grain Bill:
7.75 lb (3.52 kg) of Pils/2-row floor-malted (for that extra character)
3.00 lb (1.36 kg) Light Munich (~7° L)
1.00 lb (0.45 kg) Caramunich 3 (~55° L)=
4 oz (113 g) CaraAroma (~180° L)

Hops:
1 oz (28 g) of Magnum hops at 60 minutes left to go in the boil
2 oz (56 g) of Tettnang hops at 5 minutes left to go in the boil

Yeast:
Two packs of CellarScience German (34/70 strain)

Process:
Mike ran the mash full volume on his propane system, about 10 gallons of wort, boiled down to ~6.5 gallons. No sparge. Using a false bottom on the kettle, he skipped the hoisting hassle.

Mashed at 145 °F for 45 minutes (aiming for fermentability)
Then, raised the temperature to 158 °F for 20 minutes
Finished at 168 °F for mash-out
Fermented at 65 °F in the basement for ~2 weeks, then kegged and chilled for another two weeks before serving.

Outcomes:

Original Gravity: 1.048
Final Gravity: 1.014
IBUs: 28
SRM: 12°
BV: 4.5%

Tastings Notes and Final Thoughts

The color came through beautifully. It had a rich copper glow, a little darker than a typical Festbier but exactly what Mike wanted. The head is off-white, lacing nicely. Aroma hits you with toasted malt, a slight herbal hop whisper, and a yeasty estery edge from the German strain.

On the palate, the layers shine: that Light Munich + Caramunich + CaraAroma stack gives a big malt-forward feel. It is bready, toasted, almost like a warm Bavarian pretzel. The bitterness is restrained, letting the malt shine but still giving enough bite so it doesn’t flop into syrup territory. Paired with good savory fare, like sausages or smoked meats, this beer excels.

Does it have sessionability? Absolutely. We could easily knock back a liter and be totally content.

Tweaks for next year? Maybe pull back just a shade on the darker malts to crisp it up a tiny bit.

Overall, this Miketoberfest iteration nailed the brief: Fall, Malt character, and drinkability.

BREW ON!

Dolcita Hops SMaSH Beer Tasting and Review

Yes, it is another single malt and single hop (SMaSH) beer. We revisit a hop experiment we tried earlier this year. It’s the second time with the variety formerly known as HBC 1019, now branded as Dolcita hops.

We grabbed the 2025 harvest of it and brewed it in a simple setup: just one malt (Rahr 2-row) and one ounce of the hops in a small one-gallon batch. Nothing fancy, we are just trying to let the hops shine.

Let’s dive in.

The Recipe & Process

Recipe (One-Gallon Batch / SMASH Format)

Malt: Two-row pale malt (Roar Pale, or your equivalent) – full batch.

Hops: 1 oz Dolcita (2025 harvest) total, split across the brew process (bittering + whirlpool/hop-burst + one-day cold dry-hop)

Bittering: small charge early boil – 3.5 grams.

Whirlpool/hop burst: After the boil, chill the wort to ~180°F (≈82°C) and rest ~10 minutes with hop addition 17.5 grams.

Chill down to fermentation temperature; pitch yeast and ferment ~1 week.

Cold dry-hop: 7 grams of Dolcita for one day right before packaging.

What We Thought – The Verdict

The aroma was lively. Immediately, we were sniffing things like grass, hay, green melon, even a touch of lychee. It had a green fruit-leaning note, but not sugary sweet.

On the palate, the hop came through, though less flamboyant than the aroma. We tasted a bit of white pith bitterness, some melon rind texture, grassy back-notes, and the lychee fruit notes again.

As the beer warmed, the pithy rind side grew slightly stronger.

Some of our notes match the commercial sensory profile for Dolcita hops, especially the honeydew melon one.

So, what’s the verdict? We quite liked it. The aroma out-rocks the flavor. The grassy/melon/lychee fruit side is intriguingly unique. It is not “instant candy-sweet”, but more layered and textured.

If I were picking styles, this hop could shine in a wheat beer (letting that melon and light grass mingle), or maybe a modern lager or “Italian Pilsner” type. With that style you want to be emphasizing crispness, letting the hop whisper rather than scream.

For a full-on IPA blast, you might go heavier on the quantity or pair it with something more citrus-bright to bring out the orange/tangerine edge that the commercial notes mention. In our batch, we didn’t chase the orange, we let the green-melon and rind side lead.

If you’re looking to explore a hop with personality rather than shouting “pineapple candy,” this one’s a nice pick. Thanks for joining us on this little experiment!

Brew on!

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