does anyone have a recipe for a NZ draught, like a true tui clone? mainly interested in the percentage of sugar?? I'm gonna brew it but not askin for a tasty recipe, but something that is true to style....
Permalink Reply by jt on December 5, 2009 at 3:45pm
Pale plus 5% of your favourite cara or crsytal.
I'd suggest 10% sugar and basing that on the recipes on the NZ Hops website.
Bitter to 50% of your OG and then it really depends how flavoursome you want it to be determines if you add any later
guys, I think you're giving tui too much credit! James and barry's recipes just llok too damn tasty, jt's getting more authentic I think. but do you think there is actually any cara/crystal in there?
I was thinking they'd look like this:
80% pils malt
20 % white sugar
a pinch of black malt for colour
I've drank a few speights lately and have noticed a little bit of biscuit/malty thing that may be from munich or a very light addition of roasted malt. I also reckon a bit of crystal wouldn't go a miss. I've been picking up a massive sulfur thing in speights too.
By time I get to the speight's I'm usually a bit sloshed so take the above with a grain of salt.
Generally what is classed as a ‘brown beer’ in NZ and not a ‘lager’.
New Zealand Draught beers are in effect ‘amber lagers’ – being amber, reddish brown, or copper coloured. They are medium bodied. There is a noticeable degree of caramel-type malt character in flavour and often in aroma. Hop bitterness, flavour, and aroma may be present but at relatively low levels. In essence however – ‘think sweet, brown, malty with an edge of flavour’.
Low levels of fruity esters maybe present. Diacetyl and chill haze should be absent.
Original Gravity (´Plato): 1.036-1.050 (9-12 ´Plato)
Apparent Extract/Final Gravity (´Plato): 1.008-1.018 (2-4.5´Plato)
Alcohol by Volume: 3.5-4.5%
Bitterness (IBU): < 20
Colour SRM (EBC): 5-17 (10-34 EBC)
yes, that looks more like it! In the mean time I have heard from a very reliable source that Tui is 25% sugar, < 10 IBU, 1.036 and coloured to 25 EBC with some sort of caramalt. A few other less-than-flattering details that I better not disclose in public:) I'm brewing a belgian blonde today but next weekend I'll see if I can make something tasty under those parameters, gonna be a challenge...