Brew Dudes

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Homebrew Jar of Destiny: The Seventeenth Pick

As we close out another year of homebrewing adventures, the Jar of Destiny returns with its seventeenth round of unplanned beer‑style challenges.

With the Jar feeling a little lighter these days, we reached in once again to see what it had in store for us. Each time we pick, we get two different styles that bring opportunities.

Let’s see what The Jar had in store for us this time.

The Picks

If you’re new to this series, here’s the quick rundown. We tossed every beer style from the 2015 BJCP guidelines onto wooden discs, dropped them into a jar (THE JAR), and every three months we draw a new style to research, brew, and evaluate. It’s part education, part experimentation, and part pushing ourselves as homebrewers.

John’s Pick: 30C – Winter Seasonal Spiced Beer

Nothing says “end of the year” quite like pulling a winter seasonal from the jar. This category is a broad, flexible style that invites creativity but punishes heavy‑handedness. As John points out, there’s a very thin line between a beautifully balanced holiday beer and something that tastes like a potpourri accident.

Winter seasonals often lean on classic holiday spices like cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice, and ginger. They can be built on a variety of base styles, from amber ales to porters and stouts. The real challenge will be deciding these things:

  • Which spices to use
  • How much to add
  • When to add them (boil, secondary, tincture, etc.)

Mike’s Pick: 6B – Rauchbier (Smoked Beer)

For Mike’s pick, he pulled 6B: Rauchbier, a style that’s both traditional and polarizing. Despite being a fan of smoked beers, he’s never brewed one, which make this pick a perfect Jar of Destiny challenge.

Rauchbier is rooted in German brewing tradition, often built on a Märzen‑like base with a noticeable but smooth beechwood smoke character. Mike’s initial thoughts ranged from:

  • A traditional smoked Märzen
  • A smoked amber lager
  • Or even a curveball like a smoked IPL

Wrapping Up 2025

Another year, another pair of styles drawn from the Jar of Destiny. From the delicate balancing act of winter spices to the bold, smoky character of a classic Rauchbier, Round #17 promises to stretch our brewing skills in fun and unexpected ways.

See you in the near future when we taste these beer.

BREW ON!

American Stout – Jar of Destiny

In this edition of the Jar of Destiny series, Mike pours his American Stout for tasting and brewing. This style is defined by bold roast and hop presence, dark color, with moderate to high bitterness typical for American craft beers. We think dark grains and strong hop bitterness don’t go well together so Mike’s challenge was to brew a beer that could balance stout roast and American hop character.

Let’s see how he did.

JoD American Stout Recipe

Grain Bill & Adjuncts

  • Pale malt: 6.75 lb
  • Chocolate malt: 4.8 oz
  • Roasted barley: 4.8 oz
  • Honey malt: 3.6 oz
  • Table sugar: 8 oz
  • Molasses: 2 oz

Hops

  • 1 oz Nugget @ 60 min
  • 1 oz Amarillo @ flame out

Mash & Fermentation

  • Mash at 145°F, step to 155°F, total ~50 min
  • Fermented at 65°F for 10 days, then ~70°F for another 10 days
  • Yeast: Lallemand House strain

Water Chemistry (ppm)

  • Ca 83, Mg 6, Na 24
  • SO₄ 141, Cl 56, HCO₃ 71

Outcomes

  • Original Gravity: 1.061
  • Final Gravity:1.012
  • ABV: 6.4%

Tasting Notes

Color was opaque and dark with a tan head. Aroma showed burnt sugar and slight smoke notes. Flavor had roast, dry finish, and a subtle interplay between roast and hop bitterness, with honey malt adding some nuance.

We talked about how this version threads the line between classic stout roast and American hoppiness without being overwhelming. Mike pointed out elements like tobacco-lean aromas and a dry, bold finish.

The American Stout we brewed and tasted fits style expectations: dark, roasty, bitter, and bold.My personal takeaway is this version is more balanced than many earlier American Stouts I’ve tried. The honey malt and molasses helped bridge roast and bitterness. The dry finish worked well with the hop profile without overwhelming it.

If Mike had to tweak it for next time, he’d adjust sulfate and chloride to soften hop bite slightly. But overall, this is a stout where you wrestle with it and enjoy the challenge. That’s exactly what the style should do.

BREW ON!

Cream Ale – Jar of Destiny

In this round of the Jar of Destiny Challenge, we were asked to embrace a historic, refreshing American hybrid style.

The timing of this pick did not align with summer days as The Jar knows not of seasons.

If you’re not familiar with Cream Ale, these are beers that were designed to compete with light American lagers, which we explored in the summer of 2024.

It’s a style we have brewed many times. Let’s see if this version was worthy.

Jar of Destiny Cream Ale Recipe

Since we brewed this one in the winter, it’s definitely a snow blower beer rather than a lawnmower beer.

Batch Size:
5 US Gallons

Water:
Spring water with a pinch of Gypsum.

Grain Bill:
7 pounds of Rahr American 2-Row Malt – 67%
1 pound of Rahr 6-Row Malt – 10%
2 pounds of Flaked Rice – 19%
0.5 pounds of Flaked Maize – 5%

Hops:
1 ounce of Liberty hops (6.8 AA%) – boiled for 60 minutes

Yeast:
SafLager W-34/70 German Lager Dry Yeast

Process:
1 Whirlfloc tablet – boiled for 10 minutes
Mashed for 60 minutes
Boiled for 60 minutes
Fermentation for 3 weeks at basement temperatures – 62°F (16.67°C)
Kegged with no clarifiers

Outcomes:
Original Gravity: 1.049
Final Gravity: 1.009
Color: 2.85 °SRM
IBUs: 30
ABV%: 5.3 %

Tasting Notes

How did this one come out? Well, we think this beer delivered. From the first sip, we found it to be clean, crisp, and refreshing. It had a subtle grain sweetness riding underneath a smooth, nearly dry finish.

On the nose, there’s this light, slightly rice-like aroma that isn’t fruit or weird. It was present enough to make you go “Huh, that’s different.” The mouthfeel is light and lively with carbonation as specified by the BJCP guidelines.

The hop bitterness is balanced, herbally, and interesting without shouting at you. The Liberty hops deliver what this style needs.

We were happy with this beer. It’s not that complex, it’s an easy drinker for any season!

Give thanks to the Jar of Destiny and BREW ON!

Erebus Hops SMaSH Beer Tasting & Review

We Brew Dudes are curious, a little reckless, and always ready to wander into the unknown with a brew kettle.

That’s why we brewed a single-hop, single-malt beer (SMaSH) using the Erebus hop variety (formerly labelled HS16660), to figure out what aromas and flavors it would bring to a beer.

Let’s see if this hop actually delivers on what the commercial descriptors claim.

Brewing With Erebus Hops – The Recipe Breakdown

For this SMaSH beer experiment, we kept things simple. Here’s how it shook out:

Batch Size: 1 US gallon
Water: 2 gallons of Spring water for a no-sparge mash
Malt: Rahr 2-row Pale Malt
Yeast: US-05 dry yeast
Hop Schedule: 1 ounce of Erubus hops (28 g)

  • 60-min boil: ~3.5 g Erebus (for a touch of bitterness)

  • Whirlpool @ ~185 °F with 17.5 g

  • Dry Hop: 7 g Erebus after primary fermentation

Process Notes:

  • Ferment for about one week with US-05

  • Cold crash after fermentation

  • Dry hop during cold conditioning

What We Perceived From The Glass

From the glass, the aroma had our brains doing weird memory dives.  We perceived key lime candy meets that bubblegum. I actually said “Blueberry Bubblicious” out loud. Mike registered strong key lime and a herb-like ginger-lemongrass vibe on the nose, with maybe a hint of green grape lurking in the background.

This hop really flexes its high oil content and geraniol profile. You can almost smell floral and rose-like qualities that aren’t typical in most pale ale hop bills. On the palate, it’s crisp, citrus-leaning, with an almost candied fruit finish that’s strange and delightful. If you’re looking for a “classic” citrus hop, this one is not exactly it. If you want something that punches with a weird, invigorating character into a simple beer, Erebus does it beautifully.

Our conclusion? Thumbs up from these Dudes. This hop delivers a compelling sensory experience. It’s not just citrus-fruit, but candied and floral that stands up in a simple beer and begs for more experimentation. I’d even try it in a dry, rice-driven lager or lighter style where the hop can really sing on its own.

Brew ON!

English Best Bitter Recipe and Tasting

We’ve got a fresh batch of English Best Bitter on tap. We poured it and tasted it all on video.

One note: the head on this thing was absolutely ridiculous. It was creamy, pillowy, and defiantly holding tight.

Watch this video and check out how stable the foam was on this beer.  If you watch the whole thing you get the recipe and tasting notes too.

The Recipe & Brewing Process

Here’s how Mike brewed this batch. It’s a straightforward English-style bitter that came out just right:

Batch Size: ~3.5 gallons

Water Profile:
Ca 93 ppm, Mg 6 ppm, Na 16 ppm Sulfate 166 ppm, Chloride 55 ppm, Bicarbonate 51 ppm
Plus a pinch (~1 gram, for 3.5 gal) of baking soda to keep mash pH stable

Grain Bill:
91% Golden Promise malt
4.5% Crystal 60
4.5% Crystal 120

Hops:

1 addition at 60 minutes to go in the boil
~37 IBUs using Challenger hops

Yeast:
1 packet of Cellar Science English

Mash Schedule:
Mash at 145 °F for 50 minutes
Slowly ramp up to 155 °F using the Brewzilla, held for 25 more minutes
No mash-out

Fermentation:
2 weeks at basement temperatures

Outcomes:
Original Gravity: 1.048
Final Gravity: 1.009
%ABV: 5.1% ABV

Our Tasting Notes & Thoughts

Looking at that first pour when the camera started rolling, the head was creamy, rocky, pillowy and stable as hell. Mike thinks the big reason for that stability was the clean water chemistry, combined with the yeast’s dry finish. Everything was crystal clear out of the fermenter but a little chill-haze crept in while it was in the keg but nothing too bad.

The flavor and aroma hit what we expect from a proper Best Bitter. It has a light amber-copper in color, a bready/toasty malt backbone, gentle sweetness, and just enough bitterness from the Challenger hops to balance things out. There’s a subtle earthiness and even an herbal note from the hops. The body is medium-light, carbonation is restrained, and the mouthfeel is mellow and drinkable.

Mike has used Golden Promise before in ales and he thinks it’s brilliant as a base malt: a little sweet, clean, and it gives a nice malt backbone without being heavy.

Paired with the dry fermentation and single bittering hop addition, this batch turned out crisp, balanced, and sessionable. It is everything a Best Bitter should be.

If Mike brewed it again,  he might consider an English liquid yeast, maybe a proper ESB strain to coax out a little extra maltiness and complexity.

But that’s next time, this one is a damn fine Bitter.

BREW ON!

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