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11-17-2006, 01:12 AM
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#1
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 29
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Best Way to add Choclate and nut flavors to a beer
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I am looking to a make chocolate flavored nut brown . I have a good recipe for a brown but I was wondering what the best way to add the chocolate and nutty flavors to a beer are?
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11-17-2006, 01:15 AM
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#2
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Mmm...beer.
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Southwest
Posts: 12,350
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Eat a Snickers while drinking it.
Or use some roasted and chocolate malts in your recipe.
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11-17-2006, 01:17 AM
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#3
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 29
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I tried using some chocolate malts (2#) in a porter I recently made it it did not seem to add any chocolate flavor to it at all.
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11-17-2006, 01:21 AM
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#4
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Mmm...beer.
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Southwest
Posts: 12,350
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by bechbd
I tried using some chocolate malts (2#) in a porter I recently made it it did not seem to add any chocolate flavor to it at all.
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Maybe you had some old/stale malt. By what means did you add it? Chocolate malt is one of my favorite specialty grains, and it always seems to add a rich flavor with a hint of chocolate for me.
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11-17-2006, 01:36 AM
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#5
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 29
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I put it in the water when cold until it reached 160 degrees then I removed them. Maybe it was old/stale grains, I've never had a problem from the store I buy them from but there is always a first for everything.
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11-17-2006, 01:38 AM
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#6
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Utah
Posts: 697
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I've heard of coco powder being used to chocolate a beer. I've never tried it. Someday though. Run a search of the forum and you'll find someone's recipe with it.
Nut flavors, I think, are best added with extracts. I picked my hazelnut up at the LBHS, but I'm sure any specilty cooking/baking store would have it. I've also been told that a little bit of nut extract goes a long way.
I've been told the best way to do it until you know exactly how much will be required for your taste is to put a little in and stir it gently. Taste it. Stir a little more in. Taste it. Etc. I'm guessing that I'll be using less than an ounce of the hazelnut extract for my 5 gallon batch of stout.
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11-17-2006, 02:12 AM
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#7
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Craig,Alaska
Posts: 447
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I just today brewed a holiday ale with pumpkin,powdered baking cocoa and spices(cinnamom,ginger,nutmeg,allspice).We used about 3.5oz of the chocolate powder for the last 15 mins of boil.The aroma of the wort with the hops and all the other flavorings was awesome.I've never used choc. before but we were feeling adventurous.I hope it turns out....I'll let you know in 6 weeks  .Cheers
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11-17-2006, 09:06 AM
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#8
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 1,760
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When we made our Porter, we dumped 1/2 L of hazelnut syrup, as well as an entire container of cocoa powder and 1 oz of vanilla extract, into the boil and let it go 30 mins. We tried a couple earlier this week and they are pretty tasty! I noticed the chocolate more and my brother noticed the vanilla, but the hazelnut was harder to detect. I'd like to use straight extract next time, and perhaps add some of the flavoring after the boil rather than during, but at the time we couldn't find extract anywhere, neither supermarket nor LHBS.
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11-17-2006, 11:38 AM
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#9
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 264
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I did 8 oz of cocoa powder for my chocolate oatmeal stout, added it the last 10 minutes of the boil. I also added 2 oz of vanilla extract before kegging it, and a total of about 1 lb of lactose. Unfortunately I think it got a little infected or I did something wrong, since it has a slightly acidic tart taste to it. It's either due to the alkalinity of the cocoa powder, the amount of lactose, or an infection. I figure since no one else who has brewed with cocoa powder or lactose mention any odd tastes, must have gotten infected... Still drinkable though, and I just tell myself I was going for tangy taste...
The 8 oz of cocoa adds a nice chocolatey smell. The smell is more powerful than the taste, but it does have a chocolatey taste (comes out more as the beer warms up). The chocolate flavor is pretty subtle though, it adds a complex bitterness to the beer but doesn't beat you over the head with a sweet chocolate flavor.
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11-17-2006, 12:57 PM
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#10
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Charlottesville, VA
Posts: 11,900
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I added 8oz of baker's chocolate to the boil, 20 mins before flameout, on an imperial stout I made. It's turned out to be truly badass (due in no small part to the large amounts of chocolate and brewed coffee I put into it).
Papazian also uses unsweeted, unprocessed cocoa powder in a few of his recipes (Goat Scrotum, for one). I've done that too...works out great.
Either way. The baker's chocolate will hurt the foaming/head on the finished product because of the oils present, but I feel that the tradeoff is worth it. It gives the beer such a deliciously silky feel, like melty chocolate.
For the nut flavor, I'd use extract, like the above posters said. Trying to add nut or nut butter of any kind will introduce way too much oil to your beer. Most HBS's have hazelnut extract.
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