My dad used to make plum wine and never de-skinned them... Id say put them in secondary and rack the beer of all the bitty crap afterwards.. Good idea tho :o)
Yeah I reacon in a wine it might be allright as the tannins under the skin are more accepted. But in beer I wounder if it would give you that toungue drying bodyless feal to the beer?
I guess it depends on the amount of unfermentables in the plums?? If it has enough sweetness to back it up it should be fine yeah?? Plums are fairly sweet..
Maybe do 2 small batches in a demijohn or something and try both ways?
Thats a lot of crystal to go with that Munich? Maybe you'd struggle to notice the hops? I like the Munich though. I reckon if you want it to be hoppy but not bitter, you'll need to give it a pretty thorough dry hopping - perhaps 50g total? Depends on what you want - for example Y M had 100g dry hop... so maybe half would be good. Also... YM had 200g of light caramel as the only additional malt - with the idea being less emphasis on malt flavour so perception of hoppiness is increased.
US 05 is the best yeast for hop accentuated beers as it costs less than 1056 or 001, and results are fully comparable.
150g is heaps - should give a nice colour without sweetening it up too much. Even 60g in dry hop isn't too much... 30g of each? You wont be disappointed! Dry hopping at room temp for 10 days will make a massive impact on the flavour too. I've done it at a range of temps over the years - and that method definately seems the best.
I haven't even used it before, but if you want it in there - it cant hurt. If you're worrid about it, dont use it - there are plenty of other varieties out there. It says that there is a good dose of pine fraction in the oil profile - which definately wouldn't hurt the profile of the beer!
Hm, 5% crystal isn't over the top depending on what you want from it - do you want a reasonable crystal character in the beer ? If you do, throw it in !
Personally, I'd go 2.5% crystal and the same of wheat