Gladfield do a Pils and Pale. We've used the pale in commercial PKB both times but used English pale malt as the base for everything else (and the next few planned beers are English base).
At home I've used ADM a few times. It converts well but I find it a little more fickle with sparging - keep your temps high. It's ok in big beers but really lacks depth of flavour in the lower gravity beers that I like to brew most of all. Husky but not quite as much as the Canterbury stuff.
Jokings points are key - watch your pH with Gladfield, build a pretty big beer with both or else you'll have a hole in the middle.
I'd love to see some winter or spring barley grown here. I am sure the huskiness of our malts is based on the growing climate.
Eat some ADM, some Gladfield, some Weyermann Pils and some Baird's pale malts and you'll know why I use English malts most of the time. The taste difference is astounding. But it is personal opinion really. Base malt character is less important for some people.
Permalink Reply by jt on August 2, 2009 at 10:47am
I think it's horses for courses and if you do find a base malt that fits all, sell me a sack.
It's ok in big beers but really lacks depth of flavour in the lower gravity beers
Ah, sort of echoing Joking here, it does need some good specialty prescence in the lower gravities. As further above, I found a bottom limit ... but it does depend on what you're trying to acheive and for me and mine, it's a great staple
Permalink Reply by Tony on August 2, 2009 at 12:43pm
Thanks Joseph, appreciate your thoughts as always.I actually misread your recipe, to say you were using NZ pale as base malt, doh. But still a relevant question, I felt. Good to see others views. I agree, it is a little 'thin' at certain gravities, But I found as a base malt in general, it lacked that taste and body. I very rarely brew with just one or two malts. I find myself using MO or Weyerman Pils/Bohemian, as a base, depending on style, more often these days. I find that the Gladfield lack that biscuity, crisp taste (if you know what I mean).
Me too, but I agree with you that it'd be great to use local ingredients.
A lot of the issue is getting to know your local ingredients. I'm using NZ hops exclusively now. I'd love to use some imported hops but do not believe that they are 3x better... and I do wholeheartedly think that NZ hops are very misunderstood and maligned because of that.
Arrived at Revileds to pick up my case swap in time to see some boiling action. Martin and Reviled's beers on the same weekend, mines been dry hopping for a week. This is going to be a very interesting WBC...
Come on now its just a friendly comp :oP lol, but fair enough...
I just couldnt help myself, upped both the dry and FO additions from my planned recipe today, as well as the mash hops, cos more hops cant be a bad thing ;o)