Book 3: Chapter 52: Decocting Gravity
Ah, new brew day, my favourite!
There was always something special about taking all the ingredients that youâd painstakingly researched and purchased and then repurposing them to become something new and delicious.
That was doubly true now that I was finally looking forward to trying new drinks again!
The whole crew was in attendance, except Balin whoâd gone to the dungeon to fight the carp-whatever boss monster. Our hopes and prayers went with him.
I bustled about the brewroom floor with [Crafterâs Eye] activated, quickly pulling out any erdroots that appeared red in my vision and applying [Spot Clean] to any surfaces that showed the same.
I freaking loved [Crafterâs Eye]. From a management perspective it made everything so much quicker and easier. It was as if the universe itself had noticed my hard work up till this point and condensed all that experience and knowledge into a cheat code.
And it could still evolve! Eventually. Blessings took much longer than regular Milestones to evolve, so it would be a while. For now, it felt like the perfect compliment to my [Minimap].
ââDe equipment is all ready, Pete.â Richter called from beneath the brewing apparatus. âYou said weâre doinâ a lotta brews today, so it may need a recharge partway through.â
âMy manaâs topped off and ready fer it.â I flexed my arm, which of course had nothing to do with my mana.
âAs long as you donât waste it all.â Annie muttered. âTwice in one day, Pete? Really?â
I pulled at my moustache sheepishly. Iâd been practicing spell-work almost constantly recently, and Iâd gone a bit overboard. Annie had found me face down on the table and groaning from Mana deprivation twice yesterday. I was still getting used to my limits, and doing magic was just so much fun!
As soon as everything looked to be in ship shape, I called the team to attention.
âOkay everyone! Weâre doing something special today! Weâre going to make a kind of beer called a bock. Itâll require a few different types of Erdroot to start, along with our Goldstone Bitters. From my earlier experiments, weâre going to use a mix of Eastern and Western Erdroot, along with a bit of the burnt Umber. Annieâs given me the go ahead to use some of the hops as well.â
A bock normally used less bittering agent than a usual beer, and avoided the use of aromatic hops. As such, I was going to use one of the bittering hops that I hadnât given a name yet. It was closest to what Iâd consider a good lager hop, akin to the dual-purpose Perle without the more aromatic qualities usually associated with it.
Aqua held up her hand. âWhatâs bock mean?â
Annie snorted. âItâs an Earth word that means Goat.â
Aqua sniggered. âGoat beer? Penelopeâll love that.â
*maaah!!!* [Translated from Primma Donna Goat] âYou speak of me and my most noble race! Is my beauty on your mind, peasant?â
âAhem.â I pointed at Richter. âRichter, you said you had a breakthrough on the alchemical side?â
Richter nodded. âAye. Summa you may remember âdat I was working with an [Alchemist] ta make beer âdat glittered like gold. We succeeded, but it was too expensive.â
Everyone nodded. Itâd been his contribution to the quarter-finals brainstorming. His example beer had looked like it was suffused with flakes of gold, with no change to taste or actual gold flakes required.
Unfortunately it cost almost as much as real gold.
âWe went back to work.â Richter continued, puffing himself up. âAnd I build an enchantment fer âim like we made with tha Nether bottler. Except instead of Nether, it can be used ta infuse a space with a catalyst.â
There was confused silence, until Kirk spoke up. âThatâs⦠neat? But what does it do?â
Richterâs face drooped with disappointment. âSometimes I ferget you lot donât know much about magic. In short, it allows the [Alchemist] ta infuse a drink without tha need of Abilities or magic. Itâs expensive up front, but it reduces the cost of alchemical infusions long term.â
âThat sounds⦠quite valuable.â I mused.
âIt is!â Richter thumped his fist on his chest with pride. âMe partnerâs taken it ta be registered at city hall. Heâs gonna present it at the Octamillenial faire!â
âHave you tested it?â I asked.
âAye, âde gold effect is still too expensive, but there were quite a few other things we could do to âda beer without changinâ âde flavour!â Richter excitedly pulled out a notebook and flipped to the middle. âFor cheap effects, we made beer âdat glowed, beer âdat smoked, beer âdat looked like it was burninâ, and beers of a buncha different colours. We could probably do more too! Thereâs no limit besides cost. We made beer âdat stayed cold, but like âda gold, it woulda been too expensive.â
He bowed as we all clapped and cheered. That did indeed sound impressive! And it had implications for gimmick or special edition beers. Like a green beer for Sainty Pattyâs back on earth. Weâd need to brainstorm a list of local holidays and how we could commercialize them.
Oh Pete, you dirty capitalist you.
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âPeteâ¦â Aqua mused. âyou said that we were making a bock. How does it meet the contest requirements, and can we use Richterâs new invention?â
âTechnically, weâre making a Doppelbock. Itâs a bock with double the alcohol content. A bock is a beer thatâs heavy in malt and flavour, and a doppel is heavy in alcohol. Itâs a âmore an bigger beerâ thatâll hit like a⦠a⦠cart. Thatâs all, so we could absolutely use Richterâs invention too. Any ideas based on what he told us?â
To my surprise, Johnssonâs hand immediately jumped and I pointed at him. âJohnsson?â
âThings went really well with Beuregard last time. We should capitalize on that. Richter, you said you could make beer that smoked and shone like fire?â
I gave him a blank stare. âBeauregard?â
âAye? Ah, that's Draconisâs name.â
âHis name is Beauregard??â
Johnsson frowned. âWell, itâs not Draconis.â
Well, obviously. But Beauregard? I tried to square the image of a shirtless dwarf in leather pants and coated in flames with the name Beauregard.
It was difficult.
âThat may work.â Richter nodded. âTwo effects would be a bit more expensive than one, though.â
âThen let's make some brews!â I cheered.
I turned to point towards the long line of carboys that were piled up against one wall. âSince this is our first time making a bock, I want to test a bunch of different ratios of grains and bittering agents. Thatâs a problem, because a bock is a type of lager, itâll take at least three to five weeks before each new brew is ready to taste. In short, our beer is at lagerheads with our timing! Nyuck!â
Everyone smiled and nodded, but I continued unabashed.
âThatâs where [Rapid Aging] enters the picture. Weâre going to do a dozen different brews today, and then [Rapid Age] them all in carboys in the cooling tanks. Thatâll let us taste test a bunch of different beers in a single day, but itâll be a lot of work. So letâs hop to it.â
The brewroom immediately jumped into gear, as each dwarf ran to their station. Johnsson and Richter were a machine, and the erdroots were soon a pile of grist ready for the mash tun. It was dumped into the tun, and I instructed the pair to increase the ratio of malt to water, as that was the first secret to a higher alcohol content.
When making a bock, the majority of the hard work went into the mash right at the start, so I carefully walked Annie and Richter through the extra steps. She had her notebook out and was listening with rapt attention. I really did love a serious student!
âThereâre two additions to the process when making a doppelbock. The first happens during the mash, and the second during mash-out. You know how we use a step method for the Barista Brew?â
âHow can I ferget!â Richter groaned from where he was turning the blades in the tun. âMakes everything take twice as long!â
âWeâre gonna do somethinâ similar. When the mash has been at tha required temperature fer long enough, weâre gonna step up the temperature using a method called decoction.â
Annie nodded. âYou mentioned that the other day.â
âAye. Itâs simple enough. All we need to do is take out some mash, and bring it to a solid boil in the boil kettle. After a while we feed it back into the mash tun to step up the temperature to the next stage. Thatâs it!â
âSounds easy enoughâ¦â Annie mused.
âEh, yes and no. There are triple decoctions, double decoctions, so and and so forth. Weâre going to do a simple single decoction, whichâll only add about an hour to the mash.â
ââDey really do this fer all yer beers back on Earth?â Richter complained. âHow do âdey ever actually get any beer made??â
I laughed out loud at that one. âOh, many a brewer has agreed with you! In modern times decoction is a bit controversial. Outside of bocks, very few beers use it anymore. Modern modified malts make the process mostly unnecessary, as they can use a regular mash for mostly the same effect.â
The brewroom lapsed to basic chatter as the malt was turned. When the temperature and time were right, we grabbed a sanitised bucket to pull out some of the mash and then boiled it in the kettle before sending it back to the tun. A quick [Spot Clean] and a splash of sanitiser had the boiler back in shape and ready for boiling the soon-to-be-ready wort.
When it was time for mash-out, we fed the wort to the boil kettle, and I called for everyoneâs attention again.
âAlrighty! The moment of truth! Weâre now going to check the eventual alcohol content of the beer!â
âHowâll you do that?â Aqua asked. âDid you get an Ability for it?â
âKind of?â With that, I activated [Peteâs Miniature Remembrance] and revealed one of two brewing tools that Iâd been overjoyed to find I could summon. In my hand was a metal and plastic tool that looked vaguely like a recorder flute. It was a long telescope-like tube that ended in a triangular wedge. The wedge was made of glass and had a flap of glass covering it that could be levered up and down. âThis is a tool called a refractometer, and it allows us to guess the eventual alcohol content of the beer based on the amount of sugar in the wort. It wonât work as well after itâs been fermented, thereâs a different tool for that, but itâll help us get a baseline.â
Richter held his hand out to see, and I passed him the instrument. He looked over it with interest before handing it back. âHowâs it work?â
âEasy enough. I just take a drop of wort,â I dipped a finger into the wort, and dribbled a few drops onto the glass wedge before covering it with the flap. âThen sandwich it between the two glass panes. With that done, I just need to hold it up to a light source, and look through the bottom like a telescope.â
I passed the tool back to Richter, who walked over to one of the light sconces and peered through the round base of the tool. âThereâs a buncha lines and odd symbols. What are âdey?â
âThose are numbers from my world, and the lines are a graduated measure. Do you see how thereâs a darker line? Thatâs the wort.â
Annie took the refractometer from Richter and looked through it as well. âWhatâs it measuring?â
âSugar! A refractometer bends light based on the amount of sugar in the wort. The more sugar, the more it bends the light, and the higher it is on the scale. This particular refractometer uses something called the Brix scale.â
âItâs up aboutâ¦. fifteen lines from the bottom. Does that mean it has 15% sugar!?â
âItâs complicated.â I shook my head. The Brix scale doesnât translate straight to sugar, it translates to a measurement called specific gravity which then translates to sugar, and thereâs some complex equations involved. Normally Iâd use a special tool for it, but between my beer notes and [Mental Math]....â I flipped to my conversion notes and fired up the number crunching ability, which only took a few seconds to churn out an answer. âThatâs a specific gravity of 1.08 and it should lead to around nine to ten percent ABV when itâs all said and done. Perfect! Weâll need to take some more measurements as fermentation proceeds, but weâll get to that. Great first run everyone!â
There was the standard round of back slapping and goat bleating, and then work resumed. With the first mash done, it was time to boil the wort, then do it all again. I wanted at least a dozen different ratios of bitters and grains done by dinnertime.
I sang a little âDefying Gravityâ from Wicked under my breath as we worked. We were in for a long day of brewing.
Marvelous!