alefric LeHendz
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I was planning to brew this porter/brown ale next as my first BIAB and was wondering I should add a bit more pale chocolate, and any general thoughts on this recipe.
I'd also like to try using both Nottingham and Windsor
I do use S-33 more then Windsor; perhaps I should reverse that trend and go back to Windsor?
It looks a fine recipe as it is. I wouldn't increase the light chocolate at this stage. Simpson's Imperial is an Amber Malt even though it's fully diastatic so, with the additional amber malt, the beers going to be dryish and biscuity on the palate. The Double Roasted Crystal is an interesting crystal with a flavour all of its own. I'd be very interested to know how this turns out. In fact I might knock up a batch myself just out of curiosity. Where did you get the recipe from?ublke
I was planning to brew this porter/brown ale next as my first BIAB and was wondering I should add a bit more pale chocolate, and any general thoughts on this recipe. I'd also like to try using both Nottingham and Windsor
I've heard that about S-33 and Windsor (same?) but I'll have to try them together a bit more to be convinced. As for sourced from the old EDME yeast, that I certainly find doubtful. I have some memories of the old yeasts before we had the Danstar yeasts (talking getting on 40 years ago!) and they were all aggressive attenuators. FGs of 1.010 or more were pretty near impossible. Just getting 1.010 out of S-33 is impossible (by a big margin) in my book.Much of a muchness - like the ordinary Munton's they all seem to come from the same original source (allegedly the old EDME yeast) so just use whichever is most convenient/cheapest.
An amber malt perhaps, but Imperial and straight Amber malts are far from the same. We were discussing Imperial Malt not long ago as a substitute for Light Amber Malt but concluded UK Munich Malt might be a better match 'cos Imperial falls somewhere between.… Simpson's Imperial is an Amber Malt even though it's fully diastatic …
Wish I could get hold of a copy of said book at a decent price. I know it's available on Kindle, but I don't really do Kindle.Nothing darker than pale chocolate: My own Xmas porter is 4.5% black malt (1350EBC) (which in Martin Cornell's book, "Amber, Gold, etc.", would be a "London Neoporter")
So it is, and yet Brown Ale Malt has a flavour all of its own. It's hard to believe that in days of yore it used to be diastatic, too!My earlier mention of pale chocolate being closer to brown than amber is twaddle: I was reading the numbers wrong. Amber Malt is much closer colour-wise than pale chocolate.
Haven't tried to get the "real" book, I guess that's a hairy experience? But you can get the Kindle reader for Web browsers. The book is a great take on the history, but don't expect recipes!...
Wish I could get hold of a copy of said book at a decent price. I know it's available on Kindle, but I don't really do Kindle.
...
So it is, and yet Brown Ale Malt has a flavour all of its own. It's hard to believe that in days of yore it used to be diastatic, too!
The recipe is something I put together when I was playing around with brewfather I think, I knew I was looking to use a combination of pale and Imperial for the base and kinda went from there.It looks a fine recipe as it is. I wouldn't increase the light chocolate at this stage. Simpson's Imperial is an Amber Malt even though it's fully diastatic so, with the additional amber malt, the beers going to be dryish and biscuity on the palate. The Double Roasted Crystal is an interesting crystal with a flavour all of its own. I'd be very interested to know how this turns out. In fact I might knock up a batch myself just out of curiosity. Where did you get the recipe from?
Couldn't leave it like that. The following is an example of one of those "curves". I'm not giving a recipe of what I created because it had crystal malts added as an after-thought (about 5%) instead of padding out the curve with it (traditional brown malt making could create some "crystal" components). I had 15% smoked malt (Warminster) which adds what I think are important elements to the finished beer - not smoky elements, they are matured out, but elements that the smoke matures into.... So I emulated it with a mix of modern malts to follow what might happen in reality (based on a distribution curve with positive skew - the excellent bit being no-one can say it's wrong 'cos they won't have the real stuff for comparison).
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