Home Brew Forums

Home Brew Forums (http://www.homebrewtalk.com/forum.php)
-   Recipes/Ingredients (http://www.homebrewtalk.com/f12/)
-   -   caramunich subsitute ? (http://www.homebrewtalk.com/f12/caramunich-subsitute-56830/)

fifelee 02-28-2008 03:30 AM

caramunich subsitute ?
 
I want to do the Belgium Pale Ale out of Jamil's recipe book as my second AG. It requires .75lbs of caramunich. My LBS doesn't have any caramunich. They are recommending crystal as a substitute. Is caramunich vital to a Belgium Pale? Are there any better substitutes I could consider?

Kaiser 02-28-2008 04:11 AM

CaraMunich is a crystal malt and you should be able to substitute with a crystal/carmel malt. But I don't know which color.

Funkenjaeger 02-28-2008 12:58 PM

If you listen to the podcast episode where he discusses that belgian pale ale recipe, IIRC he does indicate that the caramunich is important.

When I brewed that beer, I was in a similar situation (no caramunich locally) so I held off on brewing it until I got my hands on some.

Professor Frink 02-28-2008 01:05 PM

I have the same problem, I'm going to be doing Jamil's recipe either this weekend or next, and my LHBS doesn't have Caramunich either. I know it's not the same without the Caramunich, but I figured I'd sub 1/2 pound crystal 60 (the caramunich is 56 L) and bump up the munich to 1 pound.

Evan! 02-28-2008 01:06 PM

I always assumed that, like carapils, caramunich was a dextrin malt. Is this incorrect?

the_bird 02-28-2008 01:08 PM

Yup. It's a crystal malt. Of course, crystal malts also contribute non-fermentable sugars like a carapils/dextrine malt, but they're actually SWEET sugars, not (effectively) flavorless dextrines.

EDIT: I think the "cara-" prefix is a brand name, is it not?

Professor Frink 02-28-2008 01:08 PM

From what I'm reading, it's essentially a belgian crystal malt. Is that pretty much it?

Professor Frink 02-28-2008 01:11 PM

Reading some more, I'm thinking instead of 0.75 lbs. of Caramunich, maybe 0.5 lbs. crystal 60 and 0.5 lbs. of aromatic malt. I figure the crystal will give the sweetness and the aromatic the malt aroma that caramunich imparts.

FatMonsters 02-28-2008 01:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Professor Frink
From what I'm reading, it's essentially a belgian crystal malt. Is that pretty much it?

That's what I thought. I'm sure you coould sub a crystal malt that is close in color and properties. But I would try to stick to a Belgian or German or UK crystal malt that would closely resemble the caramunich.

fifelee 02-28-2008 04:01 PM

Thanks for the input guys. Not sure what to do. I like Professor Frinks idea of crystal and aromatic. I think I will just go to the HBS, taste a few crystal/aromatic malts, and pick one I like.


All times are GMT. The time now is 07:22 AM.

Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.