AG#89 Hoppy Amber Ale v5
Last time I made this (
AG#75 back in August 2021) I was really pleased with the result. Nevertheless I couldn't resist the temptation to try out a few tweaks:
- I've added a bit of crystal malt, just to see, and to bring it more formally in line with the "American Amber Ale" guidelines.
- I've also increased the base malt - I plan to enter this into the May American Pale Ales competition and I've heard the judge takes a particularly dim view of sub 4% ABV beers
- Slight tweak to the water profile, cutting out the gypsum and just relying on the CRS to do the work.
I also did an overnight mash which I haven't done for well over a year. I was feeling a bit paranoid but it worked fine and saved a bunch of time this morning.
I normally only pitch half a pack of dried into my smaller brews but decided this time to try a full pack of BRY-97. It's still within the recommended pitching rate stated by Lallemand but I'm interested to see if it makes any noticeable difference to attenuation.
15L tap water, 15ml CRS, half a Campden tablet, giving:
Calcium 35
Chloride 110
Sulfate 133
Alkalinity 114
1500g Maris Otter
500g Vienna Malt
250g Amber Malt
250g Carapils
125g Carared
125g Dark Crystal
2.75kg TOTAL
7h20m overnight full-volume no-sparge mash @ 67degC
Boil 30mins:
I'm using a blend of hops, Amarillo 9.0%, Cascade 7.2% and Centennial 9.9% AAU
5g of each for 30mins
5g of each for 15mins
10g of each for 10mins
1/4 Britewort tablet 10mins
10g of each for 5 mins
Dry hop:
Will add 10g of each at end of fermentation
All plain sailing, no issues to report. Pitched a vitality starter made yesterday afternoon with 500ml tap water, 50g medium DME and a full 11g pack of BRY-97.
11 SRM - Deep amber
50 IBUs Rager
OG 1.053
Brewer's Friend reckons it'll end up at 1.013 and 5.25%. I'm sceptical that the crystal malts will ferment that much so I reckon it'll be more like 1.017 and 4.7% ABV, or at least somewhere in between