Afternoon Chaps,
As the title says, any Porter drinkers recommend a decent kit? Preferably with some tasting notes.
:!:
As the title says, any Porter drinkers recommend a decent kit? Preferably with some tasting notes.
:!:
I can't recommend a kit, but I can recommend an easy way to make a porter that will probably be better than a kit.
Start with a kit that doesn't have much going on - like a Coopers Draught, Real Ale, APA, or a Young's Harvest Pilsner or Lager. Or use a Young's Harvest Bitter or Mild kit. Then steep some grains and add some malt extract:
Ingredients:
One can kit
1kg light dried malt extract
340g Crystal Malt (reduce to 200g ish if you use a bitter or mild kit)
225g Chocolate malt
120g Black malt
25g Northdown hops
Steep the crystal, choc and black malts for 30 mins in about 3 litres water at 65-70C. Temp is not crucial, this is just a good temperature range for a 30 minutes steep. Strain, bring the liquid to boiling point, add the hops and then boil for about 15 mins.
While the grains are steeping, or the hopped liquid is boiling, make up the kit in your FV as usual and stir in the DME thoroughly. When the hopped liquid has been boiled, add it to the FV and top up to 20 litres with cold water. Pitch the kit yeast, or another yeast if you prefer, when the temp is around 20C.
I reckon this will take about an hour or so. You have a backbone of a decent kit plus malt extract to back up some fresh grain and hop flavour, which will really enhance the final product. Your bitterness comes from the hopped kit. Northdown provides a hop flavour which I find works well in dark beers. But you could use other hops. Bramling Cross suit dark beers too. Or Challenger.
You could. I would prefer to start with a pale beer kit though, because if you add roasted grains to a porter kit you could overdo the roast grains, :-?
Another thing you could do If you want to keep things simple-ish is get a Coopers English Bitter kit and add some steeped chocolate malt - not sure of amounts tbh*, but I'm sure clibit can help with this as he's far more experienced at steeping grains than I am. There's a craigtube video somewhere on youtube with him taste testing the results of doing this.
With clibits receipe you could also substitute the black malt (using black malt in a porter makes it into a 'robust porter' btw') for brown (again not sure of amounts) as adding brown malt adds extra complexity as well as a certain 'authenticty' to a porter. Crystal, Brown and Choccy are the specialty malts in Fullers London Porter which Is a really nice porter have made the G.wheeler receipe a couple of times
* @clibit- with steeping specialty grains do the amount's correspond exactly to an AG receipe or do you need to adjust for steeping and not mashing?
* @clibit- with steeping specialty grains do the amounts correspond exactly to an AG recipe or do you need to adjust for steeping and not mashing?
The main issue is the brown malt in Fullers porter, as brown malt needs to be mashed.
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