TheRedDarren
Landlord.
- Joined
- May 14, 2015
- Messages
- 1,192
- Reaction score
- 447
Had myself another little beer experiment yesterday.
Having only ever brewed one porter (Mikkellers Texas Ranger) I thought I'd get to grips with this style a little bit more.
Quite a bit of reading up on style specifics, malt quantities and general info led me to my recipe...
Maris Otter - 35%
Mild ale malt - 31%
Brown malt - 9%
Chocolate malt, pale - 10%
Chocolate - 3%
Crystal 150 - 3%
Carafa iii - 4%
Roasted barley - 2.5%
Now, while that may look like a right mess of a grain bill, let me explain, in my understanding of the style...
Malt complexity is the key to the style, a smooth flavour with low roast character and, if you like a medium/sweet finish.
So, broadly speaking, base malts take up 60-70% of the grist, roasted malts 5-10% and speciality malts the remaining 20-35% or so.
But rather than simply use base, speciality and roast I decided to split each category into more than one to give complexity.
Base malts; So I decided to use Maris Otter, mild ale malt and some brown malt for the base, limiting the brown malt to arounf the 10% mark, it can be used up to 20% but past this figure it can, apparently, be a bit harsh and dry tasting.
Specialty malts; well, I was just going to use chocolate, but I decided to break this down to a big chunk of pale chocolate - hopefully for more chocolate character, backed up with a bit of dark chocolate malt for a bitter bite and then some dark crystal for its flavours and hopefully its unfermentables can balance out some of the bitterness from the dark grains.
Roast malts; Again I split these, but mainly to aid smoothness by using Carafa iii (dehusked) for its smooth roasty contribution and a touch of roast barley so I've got some roast character.
Yeast is WLP005, Ive used it before and it went really well in a ruby/porter type beer I brewed way back.
Mash temp was 68 for 60 mins, 71 for 5 and 75 for 15 mins. Hopefully providing a nice full body.
The first ten litres was brewed as normal, but the second ten litres had 20g of cacoa nibs in the boil and will be 'dry hopped' with 80g cacoa nibs steeped in vodka for 7 days.
Then, on bottling day, half of each batch will be bottled as normal and the second half shall have a cold pressed coffee addition.
So, 4 beers in total, one unadulterated porter, one with coffee, one chocolate and one coffee and chocolate. I'll do a tasting, hopefully with friends, and I'll see which works and which doesn't.
Having only ever brewed one porter (Mikkellers Texas Ranger) I thought I'd get to grips with this style a little bit more.
Quite a bit of reading up on style specifics, malt quantities and general info led me to my recipe...
Maris Otter - 35%
Mild ale malt - 31%
Brown malt - 9%
Chocolate malt, pale - 10%
Chocolate - 3%
Crystal 150 - 3%
Carafa iii - 4%
Roasted barley - 2.5%
Now, while that may look like a right mess of a grain bill, let me explain, in my understanding of the style...
Malt complexity is the key to the style, a smooth flavour with low roast character and, if you like a medium/sweet finish.
So, broadly speaking, base malts take up 60-70% of the grist, roasted malts 5-10% and speciality malts the remaining 20-35% or so.
But rather than simply use base, speciality and roast I decided to split each category into more than one to give complexity.
Base malts; So I decided to use Maris Otter, mild ale malt and some brown malt for the base, limiting the brown malt to arounf the 10% mark, it can be used up to 20% but past this figure it can, apparently, be a bit harsh and dry tasting.
Specialty malts; well, I was just going to use chocolate, but I decided to break this down to a big chunk of pale chocolate - hopefully for more chocolate character, backed up with a bit of dark chocolate malt for a bitter bite and then some dark crystal for its flavours and hopefully its unfermentables can balance out some of the bitterness from the dark grains.
Roast malts; Again I split these, but mainly to aid smoothness by using Carafa iii (dehusked) for its smooth roasty contribution and a touch of roast barley so I've got some roast character.
Yeast is WLP005, Ive used it before and it went really well in a ruby/porter type beer I brewed way back.
Mash temp was 68 for 60 mins, 71 for 5 and 75 for 15 mins. Hopefully providing a nice full body.
The first ten litres was brewed as normal, but the second ten litres had 20g of cacoa nibs in the boil and will be 'dry hopped' with 80g cacoa nibs steeped in vodka for 7 days.
Then, on bottling day, half of each batch will be bottled as normal and the second half shall have a cold pressed coffee addition.
So, 4 beers in total, one unadulterated porter, one with coffee, one chocolate and one coffee and chocolate. I'll do a tasting, hopefully with friends, and I'll see which works and which doesn't.