Mash water warming up for Southerly Pale Ale today:
92% Bairds Pearl Pale
4% Bairds Pale Crystal
2% Weyermann Light Munich
2% Global light caramel
Pacific Jade at 60 to 29 IBU
Simcoe, Centennial 20g of each at 10mins
Simcoe, Centennial 25g of each at 0mins
Simcoe, Centennial 25g of each dry hop 4-6 days
Permalink Reply by MrC on April 24, 2010 at 11:23am
Looks pretty good overall. The only change I'd make is to swap the crystal for a ligher cyrstal. 60L at the most but preferably in the 20-40L range. Just my 2c. Hops look nice.
So after a 1 week delay, I brewed this yesterday morning. Went well. Ended up having to top up after the boil (didn't account for the extra kettle trub in a beer with lots of hops) still got 23L at 1050. Was hoping for 1056 but not too fussed. Bubbling away happily under the stairs.
Here we go again a total miss mash of a beer to use up the grains I have have no idea if I will get it to attenuate but will do my best
US Stout
27% Global Pils
26% Golden Promise
10% Malted Rye
8% Brown
8% Melanodin
5% Light crystal
5% Caramunich II
4% Thomas Fawcett Dark Crystal
3% Choclate Malt
2% Caraafa Special II
2% Pale Choc
Mash (To get it to attenuate)
55 deg 15 mins
60 deg 30 mins
63 deg 45 mins
72 deg 20 mins
76 deg 10 mins
Any tips on the brown malt never used the stuff (probably lost in there with all the other shit in it) but have a kg to get rid of along with the rye, When chewed on, the brown malt has astringent ciggy but flavour and I can rememeber trying a stout that had it in it and it came across phenolic weird aye? any tips to much to little?
I was at the Regional Beer tasting last night and we tried the Renaissance bourbon porter. Apparently the grain bill was 100kg of pale malt and 160kg of Brown along with a few other bits and pieces at the end. So it seems you can throw quite a bit in there by that logic. The beer wasn;t to bad either, but the cheesy aroma was hard to get past.
I think the bourbon porter had a lot more than 160 kg of brown, but the ratio to pale malt was about that. Elemental also has a lot of brown, which I think is the reason many people think it has a fair bit of black malt and roasted barley in it (it has none).
anyways, I once made a brown ale with 33% brown malt and that was way too much, it was undrinkable at least for my palate. imo the key to lots of brown is lots of crytal sweetness to counter the charred dryness. 8% should be fine.