Hi all,
I was just wondering if anyone had any tips on putting together recipes? I have used the Brewer's Friend tool today and am very impressed with it. I went for a "British Golden Ale" and what I've composed has ticked all but two of the boxes for the style and come out at just over 4% ABV which is roughly where I want to be. In terms of hops though, I've selected two that have similar flavours and aromas as I wanted quite a fruity tasting beer that wasn't massively bitter.
Do other people try and match similar hop flavours or is there some way of working out which ones go together? I know a little about bitterness units etc now and know to use less of a hop if it has a higher bitterness etc. In terms of aroma hops though, how do you decide which you put in during and/or post boil? (I don't yet think I'm advanced enough for dry hopping).
In terms of grain i have deliberately selected styles grown for ales and not lagers, Belgium beers etc but again there are different options.
Is it all trial and error? Should existing recipes be used as a base and tweaked to begin with?
Just having a wonder after spending an age putting my recipe together!
Cheers :
I was just wondering if anyone had any tips on putting together recipes? I have used the Brewer's Friend tool today and am very impressed with it. I went for a "British Golden Ale" and what I've composed has ticked all but two of the boxes for the style and come out at just over 4% ABV which is roughly where I want to be. In terms of hops though, I've selected two that have similar flavours and aromas as I wanted quite a fruity tasting beer that wasn't massively bitter.
Do other people try and match similar hop flavours or is there some way of working out which ones go together? I know a little about bitterness units etc now and know to use less of a hop if it has a higher bitterness etc. In terms of aroma hops though, how do you decide which you put in during and/or post boil? (I don't yet think I'm advanced enough for dry hopping).
In terms of grain i have deliberately selected styles grown for ales and not lagers, Belgium beers etc but again there are different options.
Is it all trial and error? Should existing recipes be used as a base and tweaked to begin with?
Just having a wonder after spending an age putting my recipe together!
Cheers :