Monkhouse
Regular.
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2017
- Messages
- 443
- Reaction score
- 139
Hi, just curious. The link you gave notes to add the syrup at high karusen (around day 3). When I used bought syrup the info I found was to add it during the last 10 mins of the boil. Do you think this makes much difference? Just wondering what effect the different addition times may have to the final brew, if any. Cheers.Here's a guide from Jacques, who is an accomplished brewer of Belgian styles.
He makes a syrup rather than bakes it into crystals.
https://londonamateurbrewers.co.uk/wiki/index.php?title=Candi_Sugar_Recipe
I cooked it for well over an hour. I don’t think I could watch a sugar thermometer bounce between hard ball and soft crack for over an hour and a half … surely I must be missing something. I’ve seen other recipes for dark Candi using soft brown sugar/ is t is the way forward?Cook it longer
As a lover of candy syrup I let someone else pay the energy bill to make it, based on an unproven idea that they get a better price per KWH than me and economies of scale and all that.Well I managed to get the darkness I wanted in the end, it only took me around 3 hours
May be? Could be causing some "inversion" (sucrose -> glucose + fructose). The fructose caramelises without ramping the temperature to silly heat (which will destroy any fructose!). But perhaps bicarb. is better? The alkaline environment helps so-called "Maillard" reactions. Apparently, a pinch of bicarb. does wonders for caramelising onions (I think it was our leader on this site that gave me that tip).*I still don't know whether the citric acid has any effect.
I was meaning in terms of flavourMay be? Could be causing some "inversion" (sucrose -> glucose + fructose). The fructose caramelises without ramping the temperature to silly heat
Calm me! You are just rubbing in that we've got lousy weather in the UK all the more! Grrrr@peebee
Hopefully this vista will calm you.
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