I wasn’t going to do this quite honestly. I was just going to skip this style. I just kept hearing this nagging voice in my head. Make Pale Kellerbier,…. make Pale Kellerbier, make the Pale Kellerbier.

Okay, I’ll make the Pale Kellerbier.

Hi, I’m Martin Kean and I’m taking the Homebrew Challenge to brew 99 different beer styles. And in the course of making these beers. Well, I’m making a lot of yeast starters too, and I’ve been taking the easy way out, which is to buy pre-canned wort like this one for fast pitch.

Now this is pretty convenient, but at a couple of bucks a pop, the cost does start to add up, especially when I sometimes use two of these cans for a single yeast starter.

So I’m figuring out how to create my own canned wort. I’ll show you how.

So my reluctance to brew a Pale Kellerbier, well, it all comes down to the BJCP guidelines. You see each beer that I brewed has had a code assigned to it and Kellerbier has a code of 7C but there’s only one code for a Pale Kellerbier, but two types of it. Now last week I brewed an Amber Kellerbier and I thought, well, I’ve done my 7C. beer. I’m done onto the next one, but I can’t skip a style.

So we’re going to brew one up.

And this is actually quite a simple beer to brew in terms of ingredients. For base malt I’m using nine pounds of German pilsner malts, and actually you could just stop there and go with that, but I’m going to also add a half pounds of carafoam malt. Now this will add nothing to the flavor of the beer whatsoever, but it should help improve the body and the head retention of the bear as well. So yeah, just carafoam and German pilsner.

Mashing in at 152 Fahrenheit for an hour to get to a pre boil gravity of 10 40. They do not call this beer Pale Kellerbier for no reason. It has an SRM of just 3.

How to Can Wort for Yeast Starters

So let’s talk about canning wort to use with yeast starters. Now the process I’m going to describe here came entirely from the wonderful resource that is homebrewingnotes.com I highly recommend you check it out. Now the basic idea of this is by canning the word it is shelf stable, so you can keep this around for a very long time.

Now I built a batch of this a couple of days ago. Let me show you how I did it.

What I’ve got here is I’ve got a bunch of Mason jars. These are pint size Mason jars. I’ve got some DME. I’m going to need quite a lot of DME for this given how many Mason jars I have and I’ve got some yeast nutrient which have actually just kind of put out into this little bowl so it’s easier to get at. And then we need some water. Now this is a bit deceiving. This is distilled water. I’m just reusing this actually.

This is filled with tap water, which I ran through my water filter, which will hopefully remove any chlorine. Okay, so the process basically is, first of all, we’re going to add the DME into the Mason jar and we want to add four ounces of DME. Okay, so that’s four ounces.

Then I’m just going to add a little sprinkling of the yeast nutrient, a very technical measurement, a sprinkling in that goes, and then I have this measuring jar here because I need to measure out eight fluid ounces of water and then that goes into the Mason jar as well. That’s case of putting the lid back on and we just want to make sure it’s on tight, not overly tight and just give it a bit of a shake to mix everything up and now it’s just a case of doing this another 14 times

Everything’s done. I’ve cleaned up my workspace. DME gets everywhere and it gets really sticky, but okay, this then is a pressure canner and this is what I’m going to use now to basically sanitize this stuff because we just left it as it is. It’s going to go bad, so this is actually pretty easy.

First of all, I’m just going to load in the Mason jars into the pressure canner.

Now you’ll notice by the way, that I’ve added some water in here. I did it to the first fill lines, so that doesn’t need to be a little bit of water in the pressure canner. Just check the instructions for your system to see how much water you need. But yeah, it’s just straight up water. I’ve got all my Mason jars in here now and it looks like I’ve got room for probably four more. I think I could have fit 20 into this, but I’ll go with 16 so now it’s a case of just closing this thing up and it needs to go on a heat source.

So a stove. And what we’re going to do is follow the 15 by 15 rule. So I’m going to take this thing off, this weight, I’m going to heat this up until I start seeing steam coming out of the top here. When it is coming out of the exhaust, I’ll put this weight on and I’ll check the pressure gauge and wait till it gets to 15 PSI. At that point, that’s where I want it to be. And I’ll set the temperature so it stays at 15 PSI and I will leave it at 15 PSI for 15 minutes.

It’s the uh, the next day. Now I just, uh, let the uh, the pressure drop from this thing naturally overnight that’s opening up and uh, see what we got one, it’s the one didn’t work so that one didn’t seal. Um, but if we screw off the top of one of these others, you should see that this now seal to it. Yeah. I guess this one fell down before the uh, the canning process started, which is all the more reason to fill this thing up completely so nothing can fall over. It’s definitely made a bit of a mess in there.

But yeah, so basically now this is still warm. This is ready to use as a new starter and uh, it is recommended that you take these tops off each one of these just in case there is any sort of infection. And if there is any pressure buildup, then this top will just be able to just pop off if needed. But hopefully that will not be the case, so now I’m ready to start making my yeast starters.

So here it is all finished up. Now this stuff is pretty strong. You can really consider it work, concentrate at this stage and it doesn’t need to be watered down to get it to the regular gravity. You’d expect for a yeast starter, which is about 10 40 but doing a yeast starter now is super, super quick. It’s the first of all, you pop the top off one of these cans and pour it into a flask. Then you top it up with some water.

I used to still water until you get to a total liquid amount of one liter. If you want to do a two liter starter, it’s just a case of using two of these cans and topping up with water to get to two liters. Then add the yeast, put the flask on a plate and you’re done. That’s it. A yeast starter created in what, two or three minutes? I really like this process. It speeds up everything for me. It’s very inexpensive. Thank you. I’m definitely going to keep doing it.

Now. Like his Amber counterpart, Pale Kellerbier is served very young. So we’re going to add some hops in here to give it a little bit of bitterness and any sort of aroma and flavor hops we added. And we don’t need to go overboard because we’re going to drink this while the hops are still fresh. So for the bittering hops, I have one ounce here of perle hops, which will go in at 60 minutes.

And then 15 minutes from the end, I am adding half an ounce of Hallerau Mittelfruh And this is a a landmark day because I have now used the very last of my one pound bag of Hallerau Mittelfruh for, it’s been a good friend. Gravity came in at 10 49 chilling the beer down to 50 Fahrenheit. At which point I will add the yeast from that yeast starter that I made, that’s WLP 820. So I made the Pale Kellerbier.

It’s three weeks later. I have Evan tasting. Welcome Evan. Hello. So the deal with this beer is it is, um, come out at 1.010. So it’s a 5.1% beer and yes, it is three weeks and one day old. So it’s pretty young. So let’s take a look. First of all at appearance, this looks like quintessential beer to me. This is, this is commercial beer. This is what a beer should look like. If you are drawing a bit. This is the beer emoji, the beer. Well, what’s surprising actually is the beer style can be quite cloudy because it’s so young. It hasn’t had time to clarify, but actually this is a really clear lagger, which is quite surprising. All right.

What about aroma?

Quintessential Roman. Yeah. I’m not getting much of that. It’s just like, yeah. Yeah. This sort of bear that potentially a little bit of floral smell to it. I am getting very little of that. I think with so much of your head as well. You wouldn’t be able to smell through that either, but yes. Nothing to me. Yeah. Okay. Well let’s try it taste. Should I taking the foam off my nose? Oh yeah. Brady. I would say a little bit is what I’m getting from that. Um, it’s a bit of a taste. How many hops are in this? Isn’t these hockey to me? No, it’s pretty likely heart. Okay. Uh, but um, what you could potentially get is a little bit of sort of green Apple flavor, which would say how young it is. I’ve had to be as a taste of full on of apples and they just got horribly infected, but, Oh yeah.

No, I don’t think I’ve ever had a green Apple beer intentionally, so I don’t know what that would do. Yeah. I’m not, I’m not getting that. No. Can it taste like a seller to me? I know that might be wrong. That’s what can I say? Yeah, no, that’s probably not far from the style. Yeah. I think, yeah, this is a quick, easy beer to make. If you’re in a bit of a rush and you only have a few weeks to get a beer ready, then I think a Pale Kellerbier is definitely one to consider,… and good lacing!