sour blending at home questions

Discussion in 'Homebrewing' started by MenardMa, Jan 30, 2015.

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  1. MenardMa

    MenardMa Initiate (0) Feb 6, 2011 Connecticut

    Hi all, i'm looking for any tips folks here might have for blending a homebrew sour with a new beer.

    I have about 2 gallons of a golden sour that has been sitting for like 6+ months with clementines and oak. It's nice and citrusy and seems like it'd be decent on it's own but might be approaching the edge of being too sour and acidic to just drink as is...so I was thinking about bottling a few small bottles of it and blending the rest.

    I was thinking about getting a bit crazy with it. I was just going to brew a saison base and blend with that but where's the fun in that!? The idea that's currently in my head is brewing 3 gallons of a red ale with honey and raspberry (possibly with some cabernet soaked oak cubes) and blending a gallon of the orangy sour with it at bottling time.

    Does this sound ridiculous? Any tips for this type of blending? Should I be worried about bottle bombs doing something like this?

    thanks!
     
  2. sarcastro

    sarcastro Savant (1,133) Sep 20, 2006 Michigan

    Are you talking about blending at bottling?
     
  3. MenardMa

    MenardMa Initiate (0) Feb 6, 2011 Connecticut

    Yes, most likely
     
  4. hoptualBrew

    hoptualBrew Initiate (0) May 29, 2011 Florida

    What are going to be the cumulative bugs in the blend? Also depends on how dry you can get that red ale before blending and how long you let the blend in secondary ferment to dryness.

    What I would do if I were you is blend the two and secondary them for about a month, at the beginning of the blend, thief off a hydrometer sample amount and take a combined OG, then with that hydrometer sample, do a force ferment via hot temps and frequent shaking etc.. see how low of a gravity that sample can get. If there is a big disparity between what your batch is at (say it's still at 1.010 after a month) versus the force ferment (say it's at 1.002), then you know you have roughly 2 plato left for the batch to drop and your looking at bottle bombs.
     
  5. Brew_Betty

    Brew_Betty Initiate (0) Jan 5, 2015 Wisconsin

    Bottle the sour and blend it in the glass with other bottled beers. It doesn't take a lot of regular beer to make a sour beer not that sour.
     
    jbakajust1 likes this.
  6. jamescain

    jamescain Initiate (0) Jul 14, 2009 Texas

    Also if you're worried about bottle bombs I think oldsock has a calculator for blending and calculating carbonation on his blog.
     
  7. reverseapachemaster

    reverseapachemaster Zealot (722) Sep 21, 2012 Texas

    I would definitely be concerned about bottle bombs.
     
  8. atrocity

    atrocity Pooh-Bah (2,264) Dec 18, 2013 Virginia
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Yeah I wouldn't blend at bottling... the bugs left in there will bottle bomb from the blended beer.
     
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