Hey Christian
I do a similar thing with a (modified) reccipe I found on macs website
Mochachino Stout (no boil)
2 Macs Oatmeal Stout Kits
125g Whittakers Dark Mocha Chocolate 62%
4 double shots fresh coffee
Into 21l with kit yeast
If that helps quantity wise? Ive never had any problems with adding chocolate.
Converting AG recipies to mini-mash - is this something that can be done universally, or does it only suit particular brews? I am wondering in particular about brewing a dry stout (Guiness clone), the book I have does not list an extract based alternative recipie for this one, only the AG version. It is pale malt, flaked barley and roasted barley, I was wondering (after inspiration from Joking and his suggestion for the Yakima Monster mini mash) about mini-mashing the flaked and roasted barleys wisth some pale malt and substituting LME or DME for the rest of the pale malt. Would this work, or would it turn out to be a waste of fermenter space?
Thanks for that! Taking off for a week so will study it on my return - hopefully the Y. Monster I just put in the fermenter will have had a lot of action by then too!
Permalink Reply by jt on August 21, 2009 at 2:54pm
I did a dry stout as a partial a few years back. I was put off initially by comments I'd read that you'd never get an extract beer to attenuate properly for a good dry stout.
From memory it was 800 flaked barley, 400 roast barley and 1.2kg pale. I did it as a no sparge mash, found the blurb about it on the Blue Mountain Brewshop web site http://www.absolutehomebrew.com.au and thought it would be ok. Used W1275. From memory it was ok, but I drank far too much of it before it got a chance to mature properly. I did a couple of these no sparge mashes but never perfected the technique and went back to a small steep & boil