Golddiggie
Well-Known Member
- Recipe Type
- All Grain
- Yeast
- Wyeast #1318
- Yeast Starter
- 2L on stir plate
- Batch Size (Gallons)
- 5.5
- Original Gravity
- 1.058
- Final Gravity
- 1.020
- Boiling Time (Minutes)
- 60
- IBU
- 19.2
- Color
- 18.7
- Primary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp)
- 27 days at 65-70F
- Tasting Notes
- Damned good. Roasty, caramel/toffee flavors blending into something wonderful.
10# Pale Malt (2 Row) UK Thomas Faucet Golden Promise
1.5# British Crystal Malt II (65 SRM)
1# British Dark Crystal Malt I (85 SRM)
1# Honey Malt (25 SRM)
1oz East Kent Goldings (5.00% AA) 15 minutes
1oz East Kent Goldings (5.00% AA) 10 minutes
1oz East Kent Goldings (5.00% AA) 5 minutes
.5oz Fuggles (4.00% AA) 5 minutes
1.5oz East Kent Goldings (5.00% AA) 0 minutes
Mash at 150F for 75 minutes with 20qt water (1.5qt/#)
Sparge to hit pre-boil volume for your system.
Once fermentation is complete, allow to mature before bottling/kegging. I kegged this batch, carbonating to about 2.3 CO2 volumes. Excellent head retention, for the entire pint (~1/8" thick once it's settled after the pour). Longer time on the yeast (primary) lends it to have a very smooth character. Not overly sweet, with good hop flavors too. Not much bitterness on the back end, but balanced so it's not too sweet.
This was my first experiment with hop bursting. Not sure if I'll do it again or not.
I consider this more of an English cream ale than a brown ale, but it probably falls best into the brown ale category. A bit bigger than a mild, since it's at 5.1% ABV.
1.5# British Crystal Malt II (65 SRM)
1# British Dark Crystal Malt I (85 SRM)
1# Honey Malt (25 SRM)
1oz East Kent Goldings (5.00% AA) 15 minutes
1oz East Kent Goldings (5.00% AA) 10 minutes
1oz East Kent Goldings (5.00% AA) 5 minutes
.5oz Fuggles (4.00% AA) 5 minutes
1.5oz East Kent Goldings (5.00% AA) 0 minutes
Mash at 150F for 75 minutes with 20qt water (1.5qt/#)
Sparge to hit pre-boil volume for your system.
Once fermentation is complete, allow to mature before bottling/kegging. I kegged this batch, carbonating to about 2.3 CO2 volumes. Excellent head retention, for the entire pint (~1/8" thick once it's settled after the pour). Longer time on the yeast (primary) lends it to have a very smooth character. Not overly sweet, with good hop flavors too. Not much bitterness on the back end, but balanced so it's not too sweet.
This was my first experiment with hop bursting. Not sure if I'll do it again or not.
I consider this more of an English cream ale than a brown ale, but it probably falls best into the brown ale category. A bit bigger than a mild, since it's at 5.1% ABV.