I was wondering whether some cranberries might balance out an amber/red ale - I've noticed tesco sell them frozen
Not a cranberry lover myself but it's certainly worth a go.Try splitting off 5 litres and try a test batch...
I was wondering whether some cranberries might balance out an amber/red ale - I've noticed tesco sell them frozen
How do you go about working out the abv of a beer with added fruit?
How do you go about working out the abv of a beer with added fruit?
Guesswork? That'll be my approach!How do you go about working out the abv of a beer with added fruit?
I was wondering whether some cranberries might balance out an amber/red ale - I've noticed tesco sell them frozen
Cranberries can be sweet; too sweet for me. I think you need to slowly work your way up!
A spherical fruit with a tough golden-orange outer skin and sweet red gelatinous flesh containing many seeds.Is pomegranate a berry?
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Wouldn't the sweetness ferment out??
Is pomegranate a berry?
A lot of the simple sugars will ferment, but there will be some residual sweetness. Most people will find it more than acceptable. I'm just over-sensitive to sweetness. If I use even 2 or 3 per cent Crystal Malt in a grain bill it ruins the beer for me; I can taste a cloying sweetness in the background!
Many berries have a sour element to their taste, but it's not that pronounced in cranberries. That said, it might be more obvious after fermentation. Either way, there's only one way to find out!
I was hoping for a Christmas beer (brewing a choc orange stout friday) but live a fruity beer.
Not sure what yet though. Perhaps a strawberry smoothie IPA or a chocolate and raspberry milk stout perhaps...
Decisions, decisions...
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I still love the idea of choc orange stout & will try & get one in for chrimbo.
After I couldn't get any cranberries at tesco my mind turned to strawberries as there still seems lots about.
I have a NEIPA in the FV that I could experiment with. I might get a bottle of essence as mentioned in another thread to test out a small amount.
Reckon it could be tricky getting good strawberry flavour in a beer using real strawberries though.
I did a strawberry weissbeer, I pureed the strawberries and gave it a week in secondary. I had read that you need a lot of strawberries and I think the flavour will go if you leave them too long. I used 1.2kg of strawberries for 10 litres and got a really nice strawberry flavour in the beer. By contrast I also did some of that beer on cherries, similar weight to volume ratio but I just mashed the fruit and gave it two weeks, and the flavour was much more subtle. Both good, but if you really want a lurid strawberry hit I'd go big on weight and as short as you dare on time.
Ooo.. that is a lot of strawberries.
Thinking on from my idea of testing the concept by dosing some beers wih strawberry essence (after reading essence on a recent thread), and sort of inspired by other recent threads, I was thinking I could make:
The Essense of Cyrogenic Strawberry Extraction IPA
CO2 hop extract for bittering
Cryo hops for flavour/aroma
Strawberry essence for the berries
Or does everyone think it would going too much against the spitit of the comp not to use any actual berries?
I'd think using essence would be fine, it's still a berry based beer.
I agree with Dr Mick; the goal is to make the berry shine in a beer, and if we end up with people all doing the same thing we're not going to learn much!Ooo.. that is a lot of strawberries.
Thinking on from my idea of testing the concept by dosing some beers wih strawberry essence (after reading essence on a recent thread), and sort of inspired by other recent threads, I was thinking I could make:
The Essense of Cyrogenic Strawberry Extraction IPA
CO2 hop extract for bittering
Cryo hops for flavour/aroma
Strawberry essence for the berries
Or does everyone think it would going too much against the spitit of the comp not to use any actual berries?