That sounds rather good...I must invest in some Vienna...
Two weeks in the FV, carbed very quickly in week 3: rock solid. Going to move them to the garage in a week. I chilled one of my trub bottles today (I say trub, cos the dimples are full unlike the rest). Poured with a huge head (settled down for the photo), looks great, tastes great (malty, right bitterness), great body. Great, great, great!FG 1.010, leading to 4.6%ABV. Spot on. Colour actually looks OK and it tastes nice. I was right to dilute as the bitterness is just right for the style. This'll be a good summer drink!View attachment 27213
I brewed a Rye IPA as well today. Only Brew #4 so still on steep learning curve. The grain seemed to soak up more liquid than previous all Barley brews and I forgot to liquor back so ended up with an OG of 1.058 and 10L rather than 11.5 in the FV. Maybe I need to squeeze the BIAbag more. It will be stronger than intended but looking forward to seeing how it works out.Doing my first Rye IPA, currently half way through the mash. Using a BIAB batch sparge with my Robobrew tonight , didn't want my evening brew extended with a stuck sparge(most Rye I have used)
View attachment 27670
So does the roasting get rid of the oil? I imagine it's hard to remove it all without going too roasty.Update on my coconut porter. Time to add the coconut. So I frozen two coconut's then beat the hell out of them with a hammer. Good craic after a 12hr day
I then grated the both of them and roasted in the oven. My previous attempt had great flavour but too much oil. Resulting in a thin film on the surface which effects the head on the beer.
View attachment 27675
View attachment 27676
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I then grated the both of them and roasted in the oven. My previous attempt had great flavour but too much oil. Resulting in a thin film on the surface which effects the head on the beer.
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Hopefully by grating and roasting it will reduce it. My previous attempt I just cut it with a knife into chucks and roasted.So does the roasting get rid of the oil? I imagine it's hard to remove it all without going too roasty.
Thank you I will keep that in mind, fermentation is complete.I'm not sure that roasting the grated coconut will release all of the oil so I recommend:
Enjoy.
- Let the fermentation complete before even thinking of doing anything.
- Cold Crash for a few days to ensure that the brew clears.
- Put your finger over the end of any syphon tube as you push it into the brew to prevent oil from the surface getting into the siphon.
- Stop the siphoning of the brew well before you pull any oil that may be present on the top. (Don't get greedy!)
Hopefully by grating and roasting it will reduce it. My previous attempt I just cut it with a knife into chucks and roasted.
Thank you I will keep that in mind, fermentation is complete.
Getting this on later today for an overnight mash. I've been wanting to do something like this for ages, and tasting @Pennine's delicious Munich based IPA gave me a push. My last few Munich beers have had low attenuation so I'm mashing this low and adding some golden syrup to hopefully dry it out a bit.
Munich IPA
Recipe Specs
----------------
Batch Size (L): 20
Total Grain (kg): 5.45
Total Hops (g): 220
Estimated OG: 1.059
Estimated FG: 1.015
Alcohol by Volume (ABV): 5.7 %
Colour (SRM): 13
Bitterness (IBU): 52
Grain Bill
----------------
3.5 kg Munich Light (64%)
1.0 kg Munich Dark (18%)
0.5 kg Flaked Oats (9%)
0.2 kg Crystal 80L (4%)
0.250 kg Golden Syrup (5%)
Hop Bill
----------------
20 g Zeus @ 60 Minutes
20 g Amarillo @ 10 Minutes
20 g Simcoe @ 10 Minutes
20 g Amarillo Whirlpool
20 g Simcoe Whirlpool
60 g Amarillo for 5 Days (Dry Hop)
60 g Simcoe for 5 Days (Dry Hop)
Notes
----------------
Water Profile:
Calcium 160 ppm
Sulphate 225 ppm
Chloride 150 ppm
Alkalinity 50 ppm
Mashed overnight at 64c
Fermented at 21°C with WHC Brexit Ale Yeast
That sounds amazing, thank you! I have a bottle of dunkels bock packaged up for you, I'll get it posted tomorrow thumbmosaic munich
yum i love bock beers, looking forward to it!That sounds amazing, thank you! I have a bottle of dunkels bock packaged up for you, I'll get it posted tomorrow thumb
Got this mashing at the minute, pH was a bit high again at 5.7. I've noticed that (in my experience at least) Munich malt doesn't seem to be as acidic as the calculators say, the predicted pH was 5.4 which is quite a big difference. That's the third time I've seen this in Munich based brews and something I'll have to keep in mind in future.Munich IPA
Recipe Specs
----------------
Batch Size (L): 20
Total Grain (kg): 5.45
Total Hops (g): 220
Estimated OG: 1.059
Estimated FG: 1.015
Alcohol by Volume (ABV): 5.7 %
Colour (SRM): 13
Bitterness (IBU): 52
Grain Bill
----------------
3.5 kg Munich Light (64%)
1.0 kg Munich Dark (18%)
0.5 kg Flaked Oats (9%)
0.2 kg Crystal 80L (4%)
0.250 kg Golden Syrup (5%)
Hop Bill
----------------
20 g Zeus @ 60 Minutes
20 g Amarillo @ 10 Minutes
20 g Simcoe @ 10 Minutes
20 g Amarillo Whirlpool
20 g Simcoe Whirlpool
60 g Amarillo for 5 Days (Dry Hop)
60 g Simcoe for 5 Days (Dry Hop)
Notes
----------------
Water Profile:
Calcium 160 ppm
Sulphate 225 ppm
Chloride 150 ppm
Alkalinity 50 ppm
Mashed overnight at 64c
Fermented at 21°C with WHC Brexit Ale Yeast
Also crappy efficiency as I've noted with my Munich beers, even with the overnight mash only 68% BHE but I had expected as much so OG was good.Got this mashing at the minute, pH was a bit high again at 5.7. I've noticed that (in my experience at least) Munich malt doesn't seem to be as acidic as the calculators say, the predicted pH was 5.4 which is quite a big difference. That's the third time I've seen this in Munich based brews and something I'll have to keep in mind in future.
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