1/18 Tie Kwan Yin Oolong #1-4 Plain, #11-15 Apple Pie

This week we made the usual two batches with 21 grams of Tie Kwan Yin tea each. We did two 10 minute steeps with 6 cups of water each, stirring midway through.

We harvested this on 1/25. Batch A turned out stronger than batch B for some reason even though it had less SCOBY. Had we tried both before bottling batch A (note to self) we probably would have done this the other way around but we flavored batch A with just 1/2 tsp of sugar and batch B with 1/4 cup of fresh pressed apple juice and a 1/2 tsp of a 6:1 sugar:cinnamon ratio (3 tbsp sugar, 1/2 tbsp cinnamon). We’ll check the apple in a couple of days and the plain in 5.

 

1/11 The OG #71-75 Apple Cinnamon, #81-85 Plain

We did this a little different than last time. This time we did a first steep of 15 minutes, stirring mid-way through. Followed by a second steep of 7 minutes. Still using 21 grams of Tie Kwan Yin tea.

We harvested this on 1/18. It was fizzy and not very sweet. Another day would have been too much. We are flavoring batch A with 1/2 tbsp of a mixture of 6:1 sugar to cinnamon ratio (3 tbsp sugar, 1/2 tbsp sugar) and 1/4 cup of fresh pressed apple juice. Batch B we made plain with 1/2 tsp of sugar.

We moved the Apple Pie after only 2 days and it turned out great! We just moved the plain tonight after 7 days and I’m afraid we waited too long. We’ll see tomorrow.

1/4 Tie Kwan Yin #51-54, #61-65

This is Babs Happy Buch! Our new method of brewing was producing a very strong nute (nutrition for the SCOBY) so we reduced it to 21 grams. This is the amount we were originally using for Oolong but we were doing a longer steep of 6 cups diluted with water. This new method should yield about the same results, two 6 cup, 15 minutes steeps, but we’ll see. We’re going to check this after six days. This is turning out to be a cold winter and we’re running our heater a lot. This makes for a much warmer fermenting environment on the top shelf of our upstairs closet which shortens fermentation time, for both first and second fermentations.

Batch A seemed a little sweeter than batch B. I forget which had more SCOBY, probably B. So we added 1/2 tbsp of sugar for bottles #51-54. For bottles #61-65 we added 1 tbsp of sugar. #65 is a blend of batch A and B. We thinned the SCOBY families for both batches to about an inch each.

12/28 Tie Kwan Yin #31-35, #41-45 Grape Ape

I used the new method of two 15 minute steeps of 1 oz of tea in 6 cups of water at 195 degrees. This is our house favorite tea, Tie Kwan Yin. We steeped 1 oz of loose leaf tea at 195 degrees twice, using 6 cups of water for each steep. We used 11 cups of tea, 1 cup of sugar and 1 1/4 cup of starter buch. As usual we made 2 gallons.

We harvested this on 1/4 but I think it was a day late. It was a bit strong and not sweet at all. We flavored it with 1 tbsp of sugar and 1/4 of concord grape juice. We’ll check it after only 3 days (usually grape takes 5) and we need to start checking the first fermentation at six days. This’ll be a strong batch but hopefully still good.

We refrigerated the grape after 2 1/2 days because it seemed explosive. This batch didn’t turn out so good. I think because it was too strong when we bottled it and we did a short 2nd fermentation to compensate. The results while not bad, were not up to our standard. I’ll try to keep a closer eye on the temperature of the fermentation environments.

12/22 Tie Kwan Yin #11-15, #21-25 House OG

After trying many teas over the past few years we have finally settled on Tie Kwan Yin Oolong as our house tea. It has an earthy, nutty taste as opposed to being floral. We tried a whole new brewing method that I’m liking a lot. It’s two fifteen minute steeps of 1 oz of tea using 6 cups of water for both steeps.

We harvested this on 12/28 after only 6 days. It’s been cold out and our heater has been on a lot. This tends to make for a warmer brewing environment and calls for a shorter fermentation period. Babs thought it was vinegary enough but it didn’t fizz much when we bottled it. We added 1/2 tbsp of sugar and will check it in 9 days however I suspect it may need to go longer.

Wow, we checked this after 5 days in second fermentation and it was explosive. It’s our heater affecting the second fermentation! We’re down from 9 days to 5. We’ll see how this tastes after it cools.