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March/April 2006

Hoppy American-style ales — including American pale ales, red/amber ales, IPAs and double IPAs — are the reason many homebrewers started brewing. Learn the malts, hops that start with “C”, tips and tricks to brewing these beers. Plus: Pro brewers give their opinions and two homebrew recipes. Also, plant your own backyard beer garden!

In this issue

  • article

    Trout Anglers Clone Recipes

    In honor of the start of trout season across the country, BYO reeled in 5 trout-themed microbrew clone recipes to replicate these beers at home. A bad day fishing and brewing is better than a good day at work! We hear from Dark Horse Brewing Company, Fish Brewing Company, Odell Brewing Company, Steelhead Brewing Company and Trout River Brewing Company.

  • recipe

    Dogfish Head 60 Minute IPA clone

    This innovative IPA employs Dogfish Head’s method of adding hops continuously over the entire boil. Showcasing a big US Northwest hop bill, 60-Minute is the session beer sister of 90-Minute IPA.

  • recipe

    Saint Arnold Brewing Co.’s Summer Pils clone

    Saint Arnold Summer Pils is a Munich-style Helles with a delicate, sweet malt taste complemented by an abundant hop aroma and flavor.

  • recipe

    Hefe-Hefe Hefeweizen

    Special congratulations to Ken for being named the 2005 Carolina Brewer of the year! Here is a German-style hefeweizen from his recipe collection.

  • recipe

    Odell Brewing’s Cutthroat Porter clone

    This London-style porter was named after Colorado’s state fish – the Cutthroat Trout – and features a warm, rich color and roasty malt flavors.

  • recipe

    Dark Horse Brewing’s Thirsty Trout Porter clone

    According to Dark Horse’s website, “Thirsty Trout is a rich, robust American Porter that will have you yelling “CHOCOLATE!” after the first whiff. Dark brown in color with medium to heavy body and hints of light roast. Aromas of chocolate leave way to a full mouthfeel and somewhat sweet finish to make this porter a desirable companion.”

  • recipe

    Fish Brewing’s Fish Tale Trout Stout clone

    This beer is now retired from Fish Brewing’s line-up, but that doesn’t mean you can still brew the beer. Chocolate and coffee aromas abound with this beer.

  • recipe

    Steelhead Brewing’s Wee Heavy Scotch Ale clone

    A text-book, delicious wee-heavy…

  • recipe

    Trout River Brewing Rainbow Red Ale clone

    A hoppy, malty Amberican-style Amber (Red) Ale.
    – Lyndonville, Vermont

  • mr-wizard

    Tannins during a decoction

  • mr-wizard

    Getting the most wort from the kettle

  • article

    The Lowdown on Lagering

    It doesn’t have to be all about ales — learn the basics of lager brewing and what cold conditioning can do for your cold-fermented brew.

  • project

    Build a Cast Tap Handle: Projects

    With the help of a casting kit, you can play with clay and turn your sculpture into a custom killer tap handle for your homebrew.

  • article

    Calibrate Your Hydrometer and Fermenter

    How accurate is your hydrometer? And how much wort is in that carboy, anyway? How to use the weight of water to calibrate your hydrometer and brewing vessels.

  • article

    Maximizing Mouthfeel: Tips from the Pros

    Texture tips from two professional brewers on how to manage mouthfeel for bodacious body in your brew.

  • article

    Plant a Backyard Beer Garden

    This beer garden doesn’t have guys in lederhosen, but it may have the ingredients for your next herb or spiced beer. Learn what plants are easy to grow to spice up your witbiers, gruit or spiced ale. You can’t get fresher ingredients than those you yank out of your beer garden on brew day.

  • article

    Brewing Hoppy American Pale Ales

    Hoppy American-style ales — including American pale ales, red/amber ales, IPAs and double IPAs — are the reason many homebrewers started brewing. Learn the malts, hops that start with "C", tips and tricks to brewing these beers. Plus: Pro brewers give their opinions and two homebrew recipes.

  • project

    Build a Continuous Wort Hopper

    Want to drop hops in your wort at a steady rate over the course of the boil? Then let us show you how to build your own over-the-top continuous wort hopper. All you need is a length of PVC pipe, a motor and the desire to brew real hop monsters. Plus: Put it to work — a clone recipe for Dogfish Head’s 60-Minute IPA.