JonBrew
Landlord.
Hi all.
I've not used this specialty malt before but I'm looking to brew either a black IPA or a black lager and this seems to be the way to go if you're looking to avoid the strong/harsh roast flavour/aromas from likes of Chocolate and Roasted Barley.
I've been doing some reading and most of the info out there suggests max usage for Carafa 3 should be 5% or, ideally, a bit lower. My grain bill is looking like just pale or pils malt, some munich, and carafa - no crystal malts etc.
With usage below 5% I'm not going to get the colour dark enough for the style I'm brewing - I'd need to increase it to about 10%.
My questions is, does anyone know why it's suggested to keep usage for this grain below 5%? As it's de-husked I'm thinking any harshness should be very very minimal even with (slightly) increased usage (?).
To remedy, I'm thinking of using just under 10% carafe but only mashing half of that and the rest add as a cold steep at the end of the boil. Would this combat the seemingly ill effects of using to much in the grist?
Cheers
I've not used this specialty malt before but I'm looking to brew either a black IPA or a black lager and this seems to be the way to go if you're looking to avoid the strong/harsh roast flavour/aromas from likes of Chocolate and Roasted Barley.
I've been doing some reading and most of the info out there suggests max usage for Carafa 3 should be 5% or, ideally, a bit lower. My grain bill is looking like just pale or pils malt, some munich, and carafa - no crystal malts etc.
With usage below 5% I'm not going to get the colour dark enough for the style I'm brewing - I'd need to increase it to about 10%.
My questions is, does anyone know why it's suggested to keep usage for this grain below 5%? As it's de-husked I'm thinking any harshness should be very very minimal even with (slightly) increased usage (?).
To remedy, I'm thinking of using just under 10% carafe but only mashing half of that and the rest add as a cold steep at the end of the boil. Would this combat the seemingly ill effects of using to much in the grist?
Cheers