Sadfield
Landlord.
The book launch is on tonight, so expect pre-ordered book to arrive soon.
All the recipes are available as kits from the maltmiller.Could someone post the Verdant recipe when available..? Amazing beers coming out of that brewery. Thanks!
All the recipes are available as kits from the maltmiller.
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As the recipes come from the breweries, I guess it will depend on what they used or suggest.Do you know if they come with liquid yeast or dried?
As the recipes come from the breweries, I guess it will depend on what they used or suggest.
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At least you have an organisation that came up for ale: here we've been stuck for at least half a century on lager. And not the best. I'd love to have a CAMRA here!!I think you've missed the point by a wide mark.
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The recipes in the book are mainly dry yeasts (with one recipe having a 75/25% dual pitch), with a number of liquid yeasts. Given the scale and stylistic variance in output of some of the breweries, this is unsurprising. As is that the largest and most technically advanced brewery in there, Thornbridge, recommend a liquid yeast for Chiron.Do you know if they come with liquid yeast or dried?
Yeah they do look a bit iffy. Haven't brewed anything from the book yet (mostly use recipes for inspiration these days). In particular my copy has a recipe for Torrside Fire Damage that has about 10 kg malt and an OG of 1051. Clearly a printing error rather than a recipe error, but is indicative of questionable quality controlI got this book because a mate in the UK had tasted a beer called Corbel by a Wimborne brewer and, for him, it was his favourite beer at the the last two beer festivals he had visited.
So, to the recipes: they're all standardised on a 20 litre batch, but the grain bills just don't add up: for Corbel, I would expect to get an OG of 1065 for the amount of pale ale malt specified, but the recipe calls for an OG 0f 1053. This is not consistently low brew house efficiency as the grain bills for some of the recipes look as though they'd be pressed to attain their stated OGs. I wonder if these recipes have actually been brewed!
Has anybody else noticed this?
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