Had good success yesterday with Batch 12, a scotch ale. The closet is now at maximum capacity...

On the left is the explosive porter, in the center the new scotch ale, and on the right the marathon-bubbling gluten free breakfast beer. That gf one just keeps gently but steadily bubbling, no increase or decrease in rate, since saturday night. It's kinda incredible.
So for the scotch, I backed off at the last minute with the DME and only ("only") used 6 lb's of it in conjunction with the 5 lb's of grain. Aiming for 7% or so instead of a 10% monster that would need 6 months to be good. Anywho, here was the genera run down:
- Steeped the 5 lb's of grain (including a half pound of beechwood smoked malt, might need to up that % next time, as it didn't smell QUITE as dreamy as I wanted it to) for 75 minutes or so on the higher end, 158-160 or so, to get longer sugar chains and a sweeter beer appropriate for the style. Crystal malts should help there too.
- Sparged with 170F to stop the action.
- Boil volume was 3 gallons to start, boiled for over an hour and a half (also style-correct) and got it down to 2.5 gallons.
- Added nothing but the Centennial hops I've had in the freezer for 8 (?) months... shouldn't have ordered a full pound of those but I didn't know how bitter sorghum is, so when I assumed the GF batches would be helping me use all these hops up, I was wrong. The centennial has lost some kick and spice, but I just used more of it. My scale batts are dead, so I'm guessing it was about 2 ounces for 90 minutes, then another 2 for 30 minutes and another 2 for 15. Smelled right, not TOO hoppy but it was there.
- Cold sink bath with big frozen shipping bricks from work (30 ounces of frozen water in a foam brick inside a plastic form) outside the pot, tons of ice into the pot plus cold water up to 5.25 gallons or so, and that thing was down to 89F in 5 minutes. I am HAPPY with that. I can do that. And I wasted very little water. By the time I aerated and pitched, it was 87.
- Yeast... two packets of dry (1 california ale, one mystery ale, both SafAle brand) the usual way I've described before. ten minutes after I put them into the coffee mug they had foamed the napkin clear off... I don't even need to do ANYTHING really until I'm cooling the beer down, it's crazy. But I do it 3 or 4 hours sooner just in case.
- Carboy got a blowoff hose into a huge mugh with 3 inches of sanitzier water, no fucking around this time.
And it's been bubbling happily since an hour after I pitched. Once again, the yeast method seems to be working incredibly well. And that's DRY yeast, the cheapest kind you can get. Once the scotch slows down I will age on the remainder of the bourbon soaked charred oak cubes.
Oh and my porter is already done... it was done really like yesterday morning, so 3 days. Wtf? Spec grav is now at target, 1.022 vs a normal 1.020 for a porter. I'll have to bottle it soon. Man, those nottingham yeast went through it FAST.