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Black Malt

Discussion in 'General Homebrew Discussion' started by keith6292, Jan 26, 2019.

 

  1. #1
    keith6292

    Active Member

    Posted Jan 26, 2019
    I have a question about black malt. I was going to attempt to make a stout. the recipe called for Black Barley, but I only have Black Malt. I do not know anything about black malt and I was wondering if I could use it as a substitute for the black barley?

    Thanks,
     
  2. #2
    CascadesBrewer

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Jan 26, 2019
  3. #3
    thehaze

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 26, 2019
    So the English Black Malt ( Black Patent ), which I've used and like quite a lot, is a different beast. It only adds colour and will not turn the foam dark on the beer. It can add deep roasty notes notes. Roasted Barley is unmalted and adds the well-known bitter/coffee notes and will darken the foam of the beer.

    You can read more here: http://beerandwinejournal.com/ris-dark-grains/
     
  4. #4
    z-bob

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Jan 26, 2019
    I think it will be different, used in the quantities a stout will have. But still probably good. I make a porter that's 5% black malt, and have gone as high as 6% and it's not too much.
     
  5. #5
    Dgallo

    If you ain’t first, you’re last Ricky Bobby

    Posted Jan 26, 2019
    I prefer black patent over roasted/black barley. Similar roasted flavors and color but with patent you get lest bitterness and astringency
     
    thehaze likes this.
  6. #6
    HTH1975

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 26, 2019
    Black malt is what they first used historically after moving away from diastic brown malt. I’ve used it and it can be quite bitter/dry.

    I’d try either cold steeping, or adding to mash at vorlauf for less astringency.
     
    CascadesBrewer likes this.
  7. #7
    CascadesBrewer

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Jan 27, 2019
    My shops tend to have Briess malts. Briess sells a "Roasted Barley" that is in the 350L range and a "Black Roasted Barley" that is in the 500L range. I think I have always used the 350L one, but I have to suspect the 500L version has very similar qualities to Black Malt which is also 500L.
     
  8. #8
    camonick

    Mediocre brewer... Expert drinker

    Posted Jan 27, 2019
    You might want to read this— http://beerandwinejournal.com/ris-dark-grains/
    There is a big difference between the two and it depends on what style of stout you intend to brew. A dry Irish stout (Guinness) would be best using 500 °L black (roasted) barley to achieve the roasted coffee flavor and aroma as well as the light cream colored head.
    Slainte
    Edit: Sorry, I didn’t realize I posted the same link as @thehaze (it is a good article)
     
    Last edited: Jan 27, 2019
    thehaze likes this.
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