Permalink Reply by MrC on October 13, 2010 at 6:05pm
I haven't brewed with tea before but here's my 2c:
I would brew the beer without tea and then make up some tea at bottling time and add controlled amounts to a target number of bottles. This will help determine whether it's a goer and help define a good ratio. I did a similar thing with coffee the last time brewed a Robust Porter and it worked well.
I havent brewed with tea but I have thought about it a few times. The first time I would do as Mr C suggest, when I dial in the amounts needed I would add it at flameout. Please keep us posted on how you get along with this, saves me some experimenting:)
I'm bottling my Epic Pale Ale clone tonight. I know lots of people have brewed this since it was on the Can You Brew It podcast. Any idea about carbonation level? I was thinking 2 volumes of CO2?
Just thinking ahead a few brews, I want to do another Blonde ale soon so it's ready in time for Xmas period. I'm currently on a sack of Global Cologne. Has anybody done a fairly light beer with this, is it too big for such a beer?
Just noticed I have a kilo of pilsner left over too so could sub in that for a kilo of the cologne. Looking at a 5kg grain bill, 20L, 1.048.
Nah - Colonge Malt is perfect for these types of beers. It's malted for the brewers in Cologne for making their Koelsch beers, which are basically the German version of a Blonde Ale. Just do a step mash of 52 - 62 - 72 as they would in Cologne and your Ale will be crisp clear and delicious.
Cheers guys, I do BIAB so no ability to do the step mash unfortunately. I did inherit a mash tun cooler bin from a friend recently so I may give that a go in the future. I'll follow my recipe as last time but with the Cologne and Pils. Since moving to kegs I've noticed a huge difference in S-05 beers clarity once they've had a month or so in the kegerator, some gelatine always works well too.
Permalink Reply by Mark on October 17, 2010 at 11:24pm
Personally I'm not a fan of amber malt, in any beer, but the rest looks nice. I'm going to brew something like this soon too, maybe try out the fermentis dry Belgian strain (T-58).
I did a Rochefort 10 clone with T-58 recently and it seems to have done fine. Not hugely characterful but certainly cleanly fermented, and that was with just one sachet in 20 litres of 1.100 wort!