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Brewers' Guild

Page history last edited by Roana Aldinoch 6 years, 5 months ago

viking drinking horn

For more information or to ask questions, feel free to contact any member via e-mail, or post a note below.

 

Guild Members:

Oswyn Swan of Bath - Guild Master

Elisabetha Schlafer von Wurttemberg

Lynette de Warenne

 

 

Brew series:

January 2016: 

(Jan. 31) Brewing Basics: Mead, Cider, and Beer - a SCA and Makerspace collaboration with St John the Divine

 

July-September 2014:

(July 26) Makerspace Workshop Prep Day 1: Mead

(August 9 or 10) Makerspace Workshop Prep Day 2: Beer brewing

(September 27 or 28) Makerspace Workshop (and packing list to make sure we get everything there)

 

 

October-November 2013:

Brew Day Part 1: When Life Gives You Lemons, Brew Everything

Brew Day Part 2: Rack and Roll

Brew Day Part 3: Bottles Up

Brew Day Part 4: Time to Share the Wealth

 

 

Recipe Links:

For those interested in learning more about making beer, mead, cordials, or sodas, feel free to visit some of the following links. Most likely, you'll find more information than you'll know what to do with, and some of it may make you feel inadequate to the task of brewing. Just remember that the art of brewing is as much about experimentation as it is about expertise.

 

Basic brewing:

Lee's Beginner Brewing

Equipment Necessities

 

Mead:

Our Shire's (and others') Mead Recipes

Period Meads:A Guide to Mead

 

Cider:

Reinhardt's Simple Cider

Stovetop Pasteurization to Make Sweet Carbonated Cider

 

Cordials:

Our Shire's Cordial Recipes

Gunther Anderson's Cordial Recipes (including listings by flavor)

Non-Alcoholic Brewing:

Non-Alcoholic Brewing

 

Period Beer:

Recreating Medieval English Ales

 

More techniques and a touch of food science / food mad science:

Brulosophy's exBeeriment series, including

Blind taste testing gelatin-fined and not-fined beers: Most folks couldn't taste a difference and visually preferred the clearer gelatin-fined one

18 handy tips to make brewing faster and more streamlined

 

Glossary of Terms:

http://www.foamrangers.com/glossary.html

 

General Resources:

Medieval/Renaissance Brewing Page

Beer Judge Certification Program - Mead Judging Exam Study Guide

Ayreton_Brewing - Ayreton's Brewers' Guild is open to anyone interested in learning more about period brewing. They're in the Chicago area, but have meetings at various events around the region, and are fast becoming the kingdom's guild simply because they're the largest and most active.

 

Local sources of empty bottles:

As of Feb. 2011, the Black Dog Smokehouse in Urbana says:

  • The brewers' guild has an open invite to take empties from their recycling stash whenever empties are needed; talk to one of the wait staff about where the recycling collection is kept.
  • Their recycling team picks up on Thursday and Monday mornings, so the most bottles would be available on Wednesday and Sunday nights, but the empties are available whenever they're not swamped by meal rush hours.
  • ETA ETA: Huzzah! The secret to plundering the dungeon's stash of recyclables involves passing the grumpy dragon guarding the front gate!

    Once you make it through the gate to the food and beverage acquisition part of your quest at the inn, look for the bald man with a beard who likes wearing dark shirts. (Then look for the other three. The one you're looking for currently has the shortest and darkest beard.)

    Mike will happily let us take all the empties we can carry. Mark, the one with hair (and this may apparently be a singular description among the male bartenders), is also friendly. I scored FIFTY bottles on Unofficial night. \o/

The Corkscrew in Urbana says:

  • They recycle their wine-tasting and bar serving bottles. On Saturday nights, the bottles have not yet hit the recycling bin and we could have the empties then; on Sunday mornings, we'd need to go into the recycling bin (possibly with rubber gloves).

Piccadilly on Neil St. says:

  • Their wine-tasting wine bottles are spoken for by another brewer, but they're willing to let us have about a dozen beer bottles a week from their wine and beer tastings on Fridays and Saturdays. Come Saturdays around 4 or later to pick them up. (Dena can do this pretty easily because she lives within a couple blocks.)

Sun Singer on Windsor says:

  • They throw out their wine tasting and bar serving bottles because they don't have a place for storage, but can be persuaded to save a day's at a time. Call them early in the day to arrange an evening pickup that same day (likely circa 9 pm).

Friar Tuck in Savoy says:

  • We can't have their wine and beer tasting bottles since they need them for credit from the manufacturers.

 

(Dena's called several other local bars and the Black Dog is the only bar she's found that recycles. Others might be willing to divert bottles from trash for specific periods of time, but would need to make prearrangements with the owners.)


Comments (1)

Anne McKinney said

at 10:32 am on Mar 30, 2010

I don't know if this DIY project could be useful for an SCA camping trip. It makes a "jockey box" that cools homebrew to the right temperature for serving. It still takes ice to make the cooling process happen, but I guess if you have more beer/ale/whatever than your cooler can hold, this might be helpful at Pennsic. Anyway, I just stumbled across this...if anyone tries it, I'd be curious to know how well it really works.

http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2010/03/weekend_project_convertible_jockey_1.html

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