The new one tastes like the old one but with more DMS to me
I racall there was something called Carlsberg Hof, which had a bit more flavour, and the bottled Special Brew of the day was nearly a decent beer.
That looks interesting. The low IBUs should suit the OP. When Hof was around the standard lager was really weak, I recall and the Hof was 5%. Now they're pretty much all 5%, but the Carlsberg of today is not the same as the Hof of yesterday. At the same time Heineken released a premium lager called "Special Export", I think, and that had some real flavour.I have a recipe for Carlsberg Hof, not tried it though
Batch Volume 18 Litres
Targets:
ABV 5%, OG 1.042, FG1.004, EBC 5.5, IBU 18
Fermentables
2.52 Kgs Pilsner Viking Malt
320g Table Sugar
188g Carapils Briess
Hops
24g Saaz 3%
14g Hallertauer Mittelfrueh 3%
Misc
1ml Protoflac
1.7g Yeast Nutrientf
Yeast
2pkg Fermentis SafLager German Lager
f
Mash profile
20 min 50C
45min 66C
45min 72C
Fermentation
21 days at 10C
Water
10.8L mash
15.6 L Sparge
26.4L Total
Water Profile
Ca: 20 Mg3 Na:17 Cl:27 SO4: 21 HCO3: 50
Carbonation
2.4 volumes CO2
You need to boil the hops in the DME to isomerise the alpha acids in the hops and get the bitterness (you must have some bitterness to balance the residual sweetness). The 14 + 28 grams of the the two hops, boiled for an hour will give you the (low) bitterness you require, but boiling them for so long boils off the aroma. The last 7g are boiled for only the last 10 minutes to give extra flavour and aroma. Trad lagers are not usually dry hopped. Certainly not a Carlsberg clone.Thanks everyone - must admit I’m surprised at the interest and level of response this sparked
@An Ankoù: that’s an interesting recipe. Probably a real newbie question, but If it’s mainly DME based why the 50min boil? (or is that only boiling the wort from the steeped grains and then adding the DME after in the FV or boiling everything together?)
Also it says 14+28g of hops but then says just add 7g of chosen hoops- is the remainder then used as a dry hop?
Back in the 80s I had a rather nice 9% Carlsberg stout with my breakfast in the Carlsberg works canteen. My Mrs. was there on a works trip.I went to the Carlsberg museum in Copenhagen.
They brew a old style from yeast they recovered from an old bottle.
I found it very nice
The history of Carlsberg is really quite interesting. Reminds of of the right twix and left twix advert.
Well that’s the reason he asked me to make it because it’s not readily available here (in Finland).Why not just buy a load of carlsberg? It's the real deal and not exactly "expensive". It would save you a lot of time and effort. Unless your friend is Danish and doesn't want the UK muck?
Ah, now it’s clearer thanks. I couldn’t see those details at the link you sent and my understanding was that DME didn’t need to be boiled. I assume I boil the DME together with the wort from the grain steep?You need to boil the hops in the DME to isomerise the alpha acids in the hops and get the bitterness (you must have some bitterness to balance the residual sweetness). The 14 + 28 grams of the the two hops, boiled for an hour will give you the (low) bitterness you require, but boiling them for so long boils off the aroma. The last 7g are boiled for only the last 10 minutes to give extra flavour and aroma. Trad lagers are not usually dry hopped. Certainly not a Carlsberg clone.
Of old underpants and cabbage?!For what it's worth I saw a program the other night where Greg Wallace did a tour of a carling factory... They did a 45 minute boil
Exactly right, the beer may not be to our particular tastes but I would be very surprised if anyone here could actually create a good clone.In all seriouslness, while we might not approve of the Carlsberg that was ladled out in the 70s and 80s, making a reasonable copy is no easy matter and takes as much skill, if not more, than cloning some other beers
Exactly.Ah, now it’s clearer thanks. I couldn’t see those details at the link you sent and my understanding was that DME didn’t need to be boiled. I assume I boil the DME together with the wort from the grain steep?
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