Yeah that's what I was thinking, maybe a just a touch of columbus. But then again, I do like the idea of straight amarillo, especially since I don't think I've ever used it as a single or dominant hop in a beer.
That's a lot of Brown malt brother... have you brewed with it before? I had a taste of some the other day: and it was extremely acrid. The amount of pyrazines in Brown would be through the roof!
Just double check the net to see what the recommended range is... or the Thomas Fawcett website to get some ideas. It seems like a lot... maybe ask someone who uses it a lot to get a feel for how much to use.
Permalink Reply by Dale on November 9, 2009 at 8:48pm
Na Joking this would be the first time with Brown I'll go do some googling. Does the rest sound about right? Going to also change 60 min hops to Target.
Here are recipes for Sierra Nevada Pale Ale and Torpedo clones that their people sent us for the last Wellington SOBA tasting at Central City.
It's all in US temp and weights so a bit of conversion will need to be done.
Happy brewing!
For Pale Ale:
Per 5 gal.
11.5 lbs Two-row pale malt
10 oz Caramel malt 60L
8 oz Dextrine malt
Whole cone hops only.
1 oz US magnum hops 11% AA (60 min)
1 oz cascades (30 min)
1 oz Cascades (15 min)
1 oz Cascades (knockout)
American Ale yeast
Ferment at 68 degrees F for 7 days
Chill in secondary for 12 days.
Pitch with dextrose and bottle.
Torpedo:
It is nearly impossible to re-create Torpedo exactly.
However, a good homebrew method might be to siphon from one carboy or bucket into another vessel filled with hops and then re-siphon back into the first vessel for 3 days at 40 degrees F.
Whole cone hops
2 oz German Magnum 13% AA (60 min)
1 oz German Magnum (45 min)
1 oz Crystal (15 min)
.5 oz German magnum (15 min)
Torpedo: Citra (Simcoe or Amarillo would also work), Crystal, Magnum
American Ale yeast
Ferment 60 degrees F for 11 days
Transfer to secondary for 12 days, chill to 40 degrees F and move through whole cone hop bed slowly for three days.
According to their very own website - Perle and Magnum for bittering, and cascade for flavour and aroma, most recipes ive seen have the Perle in @ 30 mins and ive also been told it plays quite a big part in the flavour profile, which it probably would being a 30 min bittering addition...