About the chillies: I'll overdo it. But I'll like it anyway (or not but keep it a secret and drink it with a straight smiling nodding face: "That's nice"-as Mrs Browns would say....lol) When I moved to Ireland my favourite beer was Beamish, but I like Guinness and Murphys as well...I assumed you have your own recipes...I like to keep notes just to be able to replicate anything I brewed beforehand...I am not to precise, just the type and amounts of malt and hops (boiling times for latter as well) Anyhow I'll go with roasted nibs, how much do you suggest for 20 litres? In secondary? For how long? Would you send me some kveik if I pay for postage and a few bobs for your trouble/time? Also I can send you (or anyone else interested) a sourdough starter if you wanna experiment with sour beers and/or sourdough bread.Asking me for a trusted recipe.... lol I rarely follow a trusted recipe bud.
That said, I have multiple books, with multiple stout recipes (including ones for Murphys and Guinness), so if you give me an idea of what you like, I'm sure I can find one you can use as a base. You'll have to go Googling to find out how much chilli to use. I can tell you how many nibs I used in my porter happily though, but I would definitely suggest using the roasted ones. I used the raw ones, and although it's a chocolate flavour they give, it's an odd sour chocolate flavour. It works, but isn't what you expect, if you know what I mean?
Thanks, will try it soon and report back how it turned out.Right here bud: porter link. I post all of my recipes on my brew day thread (I have an older one in there too, from my old equipment), in case other folks want to try them. It worked lovely, the one tweak I plan to try out though is using a bit of brown malt in future, more in line with a more traditional porter grain bill. I didn't have any brown malt when I brewed that though. I've switched over to darker Munich too, should give a fuller flavour. That's for a target of 13 litres at 80% brew house efficiency (I hit 78.5%), so you'll need to scale it to suit. It's easy to play with too, I want a really full bodied beer, and had read that Kveik can run away with attenuation, so mashed high at 69 degrees C, I still got 75.9% apparent attenuation... But if you wanted it a bit dryer you could easily mash a bit lower and get a higher ABV...
My wife literally won't usually drink porters or stouts, but really enjoys a bottle of that one. We agreed, it'd be nice with US style hopping too, a good heavy hopping of Mosaic, Citra and Amarillo. I love a nice versatile grist.
Thanks, will try it soon and report back how it turned out.
Your starter is filled in a "vial", gonna post it tomorrow. If there's any liquid on it, just pour that out, then fill vial with water shake and mix with wholemeal flour:water mix, 1:1...should be bubbling and sour smelling in 6-24 hours depending on temp. No metal utensils. I like to keep it in a glass jar. Wash the jar at least once a week to avoid ontamination by moulds. I feed it every day, and 2-3 times on the day I wanna make a dough. Hope you'll have as nice breads as us. At times before you smell sour you can detect floral aromas (really nice...)@Inkman Happy to send you some yeast. Will send you a DM.
The raw sour is not sour and its finished fermenting. Is it too late to do anything? Its been 48 hours.
Edit. Just read the article again and noticed the i can "cheat" with lactic acid! Nice one Ade
Not to be smart but I made my last kvass with sourdough starter. (50:50 rye bread and lager malt, mashed for 60mins) I steeped some coriander and orange rind in it, then for the 6 litres I added 3 spoonful of starter...plan was to boil after achieved the required sourness. But instead just left it ferment out with the yeasts in the starter....elderberry/honey taste and aroma was the result. You could give it a go....it gives a nice sourness with floral notes.The raw sour is not sour and its finished fermenting. Is it too late to do anything? Its been 48 hours.
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