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Different Grains and Beer Color

Discussion in 'Recipes/Ingredients' started by Steel-Reserve, Aug 14, 2008.

 

  1. #1
    Steel-Reserve

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 14, 2008
    I have a question.. if you want light or dark colored beer. are all the grains pretty much the same? is it how you boil the wort that gives u color? someone please explain.. thanks. or lead me to a site or thread that does... thanks again
     
  2. #2
    DeathBrewer

    Maniacally Malty  

    Posted Aug 15, 2008
    check out the different malts and grains at briess website:

    http://brewingwithbriess.com/Products/Default.htm

    grains also affect flavor, so you need to work it into your recipe. for instance, let's compare 2-row to chocolate malt (two extremes of the range):

    The lovibond rating is the color...notice that the chocolate malt is very dark. in small amounts it could add a red to brown color and impart a small amount of flavor. large enough amounts will make it nearly black and impart a huge flavor (too much can definitely be a bad thing with any specialty grain.)

    2-row on the other hand is a simple base malt, NOT a specialty malt. nothing has been done to it, it hasn't been kilned or baked or anything to impart too much flavor. it adds a minimal amount of color, and is used mostly for conversion and to create the base for fermentables to create alcohol.

    Chocolate Malt
    Lovibond - 350
    Flavor - Rich, Roasted, Coffee, Cocoa
    Description - Use in all beer styles for color adjustment. Use 1-10% for desired color in Porter and Stout. The rich roasted coffee, cocoa flavor is very complementary when used in higher percentages in Porters, Stouts, Brown Ales, and other dark beers.

    2-Row Brewers Malt
    Lovibond - 1.8
    Flavor - Mild Malty
    DP 140 (This is the diastatic power...the amount of starches it can convert into simple sugars for the yeast to make alcohol)
    Description - Base malt for all beer styles. Smoother, less grainy flavor than 6-Row Brewers Malt. Slightly higher yield than 6-Row Brewers Malt. Slightly lower protein than 6-Row Brewers Malt.

    hope that helps. read the website.
     
  3. #3
    Steel-Reserve

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 15, 2008
    helps a whole lot! thanks! i'ma read it whe i get home. 'bout to clock out of work! :)
     
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