Quick conditioning stout

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pottsworth

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Does anyone have advice / a recipe for a stout that could be ready to drink fairly quickly?

The last couple of batches I’ve made have taken a couple of months to smooth out in a bottle, but I was hoping to keg one and have it ready for Christmas.
 
Does anyone have advice / a recipe for a stout that could be ready to drink fairly quickly?

The last couple of batches I’ve made have taken a couple of months to smooth out in a bottle, but I was hoping to keg one and have it ready for Christmas.
Use kviek yeast. It has a really fast turn round. I have my second batch in the bottles a week now and you could drink it already
 
Does anyone have advice / a recipe for a stout that could be ready to drink fairly quickly?

The last couple of batches I’ve made have taken a couple of months to smooth out in a bottle, but I was hoping to keg one and have it ready for Christmas.
My advice to you is to better plan ahead. There something called a critical mass in homebrewing where you match brewing output with consumption, with a sensible allowance for conditioning. So if you typically drink 10 pints a week and allow a month from pitching to finish of carbing and 8 weeks conditioning you will need to brew 23 litres or so every month and have a continous store of about 45/50 litres of beer conditioning and 20 litres drinking which means enough bottles or PB capacity for about 70 litres of beer. And of course if you drink more at certain times of the year like Xmas you will need to factor that in too.
 
IMG_20191205_161014595.jpg

That's a test bottle I had earlier during a break from painting the kitchen. It's in the bottle one week. Will be perfect for Christmas
 
How about some lovely Scottish Porter.... Circa 1880s

23L Batch
2000g Golden Promise Malt
1800g Amber Malt
600g Black Malt
Boil 90 mins
25g Fuggles @ 90 mins
25g Fuggles @ 10 Mins
Yeast: Edinburgh Ale
ABV 4%
IBU 20
 
My advice to you is to better plan ahead. There something called a critical mass in homebrewing where you match brewing output with consumption, with a sensible allowance for conditioning. So if you typically drink 10 pints a week and allow a month from pitching to finish of carbing and 8 weeks conditioning you will need to brew 23 litres or so every month and have a continous store of about 45/50 litres of beer conditioning and 20 litres drinking which means enough bottles or PB capacity for about 70 litres of beer. And of course if you drink more at certain times of the year like Xmas you will need to factor that in too.

That’s fine in theory, but I o lot have space for one 2 keg kegerator, and nowhere else to condition additional legs.
 
If you are really short of time and AG is out at the mo use a Coopers stout and maybe add a few adjuncts or cold/hot steeps . It turns around and is drinkable really quick
 
If you are really short of time and AG is out at the mo use a Coopers stout and maybe add a few adjuncts or cold/hot steeps . It turns around and is drinkable really quick
Agree with the Coopers Stout for quick turnaround, Im a relative newbie. Was @terrym who gave me good recipes/advice. Think i overdid it with the treacle tho lol
 
The other thing I started doing which I think speeds up the turnaround is to add my roasted barley the last 10 mins of the mash.
 
The reason why stouts can take longer to condition is because the roasted grains can take time to smooth out. If you cold steep the roasted grains, this gives a smoother flavour straight away so you dont need a long conditioning time. So take your favourite stout recipe and just cold steep the roasted (choccy, roasted barley or black malts)

Tbh, I've only done this once as the stout was too smooth for my tastes as I like an aggressive roastyness in a stout, but it should make it quicker conditioning (if perhaps not super quick)
 
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My advice is not to boil it. I have found it conditions much faster if the wort is not boiled as there is no harsh roastiness. I like my stouts smooth so suits my taste. Grain to glass in 2 weeks easily but if you want it faster use kveik and ferment warm. I do a full volume mash now, collect the wort and make a hop tea.
 
How about some lovely Scottish Porter.... Circa 1880s

23L Batch
2000g Golden Promise Malt
1800g Amber Malt
600g Black Malt
Boil 90 mins
25g Fuggles @ 90 mins
25g Fuggles @ 10 Mins
Yeast: Edinburgh Ale
ABV 4%
IBU 20
From Ronald Pattinson's archives?
 
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