Malt Extract Light syrup: 7 lbs. Specialty Malts Crystal, amber (40 L.): 0.75 1b. Dextrin malt, dry: 2 oz. Bittering Hops Perle, whole: 2 oz. Finishing Hops Cascade, whole: 3 oz. Yeast American Ale, liquit (Wyeast 1056) Clarifying Aids Irish moss: 1 tsp. Gelatin: 2 tsp. Inorganics Ascorbic acid: 0.5 tsp. Priming Corn sugar: 0.75 cup Water 3 gal. water to start boil 2 gal. boiled and cooled water for start of fermentation 0.5 gal. water for priming sugar
* Start the yeast a day or so ahead of time. * Sanitize all equipment! I used a 20-quart cheapo pot, a 5-gal. William's siphonless plastic fermentation bucket, and a William's siphonless priming tank. * Bring 3 gal. water to a boil. * At the following times before the end of the boil, add the following: * 90 min.: malt extract and 1 oz. bittering hops * 60 min.: 1 oz. bittering hops * 30 min.: 1 oz. finishing hops * 15 min.: 1 oz. finishing hops * 5 min.: specialty malts and Irish moss * 0 min.: 1 oz. finishing hops and ascorbic acid * Cool with wort chiller or just let it sit until cooled below 90 F. * Sparge (pour in a splashy manner) and strain into fermentation bucket * Pour in the previously boiled and cooled water to make 4.75 gal. * When wort has cooled to below 80 F, cast yeast. * Remove a hydometer-tube-full of wort for specific gravity readings. * Put airlocks on containers. * Take daily specific gravity readings. * After 3 to 5 days, drain to secondary fermenter. * At that time, dissolve gelatin in a cup of hot water and stir in. * When hydrometer readings don't change for 2 days, the wort is ready for bottling. * Dissolve priming sugar in 0.5 gal. boiled and cooled water. (This will bring the volume back up to about 5 gal.) Siphon or gently pour into priming tank. * Drain wort into priming tank, leaving sediment behind. * Bottle in sanitized bottles. * Wait 2 weeks for carbonation.
OG = 1.053, FG = 1.018 Alcohol = about 3.7% by volume, including the effect of dilution. This one got better with age, but it didn't quite duplicate Sierra Nevada's pale ale. Next time I'll use more bittering and finishing hops, and even do some dry hopping. Both Sierra Nevada Pale ale and Anchor Liberty Ale reportedly use only Cascade hops.