caerleon
Regular.
Thanks mate
IPA said:caerleon said:Post away you have some followers on here whom would dearly like to try it!
Well here it is and it is very close to the original. I think the key ingredient is the Brewferm Special B and that is what gives it the unique taste. The sugar I used was Sainsbury's Light Soft Brown Fairtrade which is unlike most others in that it is almost white in colour. I cannot find an equivalent here in France so I will have to get some sent from England before I can brew it again. The recipe is for 19 litres
Pale Malt 7 EBC 3800 grams 74.9%
Wheat Malt 3.5 EBC 475 grams 9.4%
Brewferm Special B 350 EBC 550 grams 10.8%
Sugar, Sainsbury's Light Soft Brown Fairtrade 0 EBC 250 grams 4.9%
Hop Variety Type Alpha Time grams Ratio
Northern Brewer Whole 8.2 % 90 mins 30 grams 75%
Styrian Goldings Whole 4.5 % 15 mins 10 grams 25%
Final Volume: 19 Litres
Original Gravity: 1.065
Final Gravity: 1.014
Alcohol Content: 6.7% ABV
Total Liquor: 28.7 Litres
Mash Liquor: 12.1 Litres
Mash Efficiency: 80 %
Bitterness: 30.3059732527697 EBU
Colour: 81 EBC
Good luck to anyone tries it. Please let me have some feed back good or bad.
IPA
guyb said:IPA said:caerleon said:Post away you have some followers on here whom would dearly like to try it!
Well here it is and it is very close to the original. I think the key ingredient is the Brewferm Special B and that is what gives it the unique taste. The sugar I used was Sainsbury's Light Soft Brown Fairtrade which is unlike most others in that it is almost white in colour. I cannot find an equivalent here in France so I will have to get some sent from England before I can brew it again. The recipe is for 19 litres
Pale Malt 7 EBC 3800 grams 74.9%
Wheat Malt 3.5 EBC 475 grams 9.4%
Brewferm Special B 350 EBC 550 grams 10.8%
Sugar, Sainsbury's Light Soft Brown Fairtrade 0 EBC 250 grams 4.9%
Hop Variety Type Alpha Time grams Ratio
Northern Brewer Whole 8.2 % 90 mins 30 grams 75%
Styrian Goldings Whole 4.5 % 15 mins 10 grams 25%
Final Volume: 19 Litres
Original Gravity: 1.065
Final Gravity: 1.014
Alcohol Content: 6.7% ABV
Total Liquor: 28.7 Litres
Mash Liquor: 12.1 Litres
Mash Efficiency: 80 %
Bitterness: 30.3059732527697 EBU
Colour: 81 EBC
Good luck to anyone tries it. Please let me have some feed back good or bad.
IPA
I'm going to have a crack at this soon, as the mother-in-law is bringing me some cases of Pelforth Brun back from France in a few days, after having single handedly had a go at drinking the region dry last summer when we were there on holiday.
As I notice you used Safale-04 and what temperature did you ferment at?
I was looking at a Whitelabs yeast WLP530 Abbey Ale Yeast?
Also, can you use something other than Brewferm Special B?, I was looking at Rob's site(TheMaltMiller), and there is the DINGEMANS SPECIAL B PER 500G and for roughly the same EBC as the Brewferm there is WEYERMANN CARA AROMA MALT 500G
IPA said:guyb said:
I'm going to have a crack at this soon, as the mother-in-law is bringing me some cases of Pelforth Brun back from France in a few days, after having single handedly had a go at drinking the region dry last summer when we were there on holiday.
As I notice you used Safale-04 and what temperature did you ferment at?
I was looking at a Whitelabs yeast WLP530 Abbey Ale Yeast?
Also, can you use something other than Brewferm Special B?, I was looking at Rob's site(TheMaltMiller), and there is the DINGEMANS SPECIAL B PER 500G and for roughly the same EBC as the Brewferm there is WEYERMANN CARA AROMA MALT 500G
Hi
I fermented it at 20° and Safale-04 worked fine.I don't think that you will be disappointed with the result. Last week though I brewed a batch with yeast recoved from a bottle of Chimay Rouge and I will post the result later but from memory it does not smell as close as the one with Safale-04.
Brewferm (Brouwland) rebadge Castle Maltings malt with their own name and Castle Maltings buy all of their special malts from Dingerman's so Brewferm Special B is really Dingerman's Special B and as they hold the patent on it nobody else makes it.So look no further spend your money with Rob. It is the Special B that gives the unique flavour and my advice is not to use anything else. If I ever run out of my own beer' which is not very often, I mix a bottle of commercial Pelforth Brune with a bottle of any cheap lager and the result is something that tastes very similiar to Newcastle Brown which is also a blended beer.
Good luck with the brewing
Ian
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