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After some advice on a barley wine, never done one before so I'm not sure if I need to go a bit bigger in the hop department than usual. Grain bill, I Was thinking about 90% base, 5% light crystal, 5% sugar and a touch of choc for colour. I'm not sure what light grain to use, I have carared, pale crystal, melanoiden, caramalt, caraamber and dark caramalt. Shoud I keep it simple and just use pale crystal or maybe a combo?
This is only for a 10L batch as I use BIAB, when I come to do this for real I'll probably use a mash tun and go 18-20L.
Ugh, what's up with the formatting on here today. Can't paste the recipe in without it looking shit.
10L Batch size
SG 1.101
IBU 97
SRM 15
90 min boil
90.5% Pale malt (Marris Otter)
4.5% Carared
4.5% Sugar
0.5% Pale Choc
97 IBU of Warrior at 60
50g of Ahtanum at 0
50g of Amarillo at 0
Planning on building up a S-05 yeast cake from an ordinary bitter for this.
Hell no mate. Infact, your 97IBU at 60 will actually be something more along the lines of 40 - 50 IBU. When the wort is so saturated with sugars, the other compunds that you are trying to disolve into the wort (in this case isohumulone) don't get disolved as easily. There's no real way around it, other than adding iso-hop extract to get the exact bitterness you require.
Anyhow... bla bla bla - it won't be too bitter. I gurantee.
1.100 of pure maris otter would be intense enough... it'll be awesome even with a little carared in there. Nice simple grain bill.
I'd go back even further than Jo with those hops and get them in at 15min. Your young beer will be a bit dull without either a bit of hop flavour or some interesting yeast characteristic. US05 won't give you much of the latter, so get some more hop flavour in there. The extra bitterness will help lift the hop flavour through the malt too.
And brew more than 10L.
Trust me.
20L still isn't enough, the more the better, stash 10L under the house and forget about it for a few years.
I am going to show some people in Miami how to make some home brew. It seems that the favourite beers for these guys are along the lines of Monteith's Pilsner, Landshark, and other lightly hopped light in colour beers.
Personally, I want to avoid using any lager yeast, as fermenting in Miami will be a constant battle against the heat. As such, what would you recommend putting down? Although they generally like lightly hopped beers, I would not mind kicking it up a little bit. Probably a beer that is very light in colour, and a somewhat flowery hop.
Recommendations or recipes?
Thanks!
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