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Ever Mix Your Beers For The Hell of It?

Discussion in 'General Homebrew Discussion' started by ultravista, Mar 5, 2013.

 

  1. #1
    ultravista

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I often mix my beers to experiment with different taste combinations. Most of the time it works out pretty well.

    For example, I have a dark oatmeal stout, an Arrogant Bastard, and a Westvleteren 12 clone kegged. I'll take the Westy 12 as a base, add some of the Arrogant Bastard, then top it off with the oatmeal stout. I really dig the flavor of all three - the heavenly goodness of fine quad, the hop bite from the Chinook, and the dark roasty flavor from the stout.

    That had me thinking of combining recipes, especially the Arrogant Bastard & Westy with Chinook hops, candy syrup, Chinooks, and maybe a little chocolate & oatmeal.

    Whaddaya think, should I put the pint down ...?
     
  2. #2
    NorthRiverS

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I've taken an overcarbed beer and mixed it with a low carbed beer, to even out the carbonation.

    NRS
     
    Stauffbier likes this.
  3. #3
    helibrewer

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I have blended a dark strong that was a bit sweet with a dry duppel.
     
  4. #4
    hillhousesawdustco

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I mix all sorts of stuff- often dark, malty beers with whatever ipa is on tap. Fun to experiment and sometimes will give you a swell idea for a hybrid beer!
     
  5. #5
    DoctorDuvel

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    The idea of doing this is usually off-putting for me. I get a similar feeling when thinking about mixing italian and chinese food.
     
  6. #6
    torstensson

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    "Black and Tan"
    A mix of pale ale and a stout. If you use pale lager and a stout it's called a "Half and half"

    Its not bad even though prefer not to mix :)
     
    454k30 likes this.
  7. #7
    stratslinger

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    At one time I had a robust porter and a tart raspberry wheat that made a nice 30/70 blend. Another time I had a blueberry and a chocolate stout that I thought would make a good blend, but I never could find a good proportion. Most of the time though, I haven't really had beers around that screamed out "blend me".
     
  8. #8
    454k30

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I was going to say black and tan as well. Beer mixes well and can create some really cool flavors. Doing so certainly isn't for the traditionalist though. To many that is like putting a fruit slice on the rim of a hefeweizen.
     
  9. #9
    matteroftaste

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I have a Citra SMaSH that i find too overbearing, turns out i dont like citra very much, but blended with an aipa its lovely!
     
  10. #10
    baulz

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I mixed a lot of Porter and IPA last year.
     
  11. #11
    VaBrewer

    Senior Member  

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I've mixed my Black IPA with my Raspberry Wheat 70/30 and its fantastic.
     
  12. #12
    GrogNerd

    mean old man

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    at a brew club meeting around Christmas I got passed a chocolate porter coming one way and a kriek coming the other way and my first thought was CORDIAL BEER!

    think it was a 75/25 mix, porter to lambic and I thought it was pretty darn tasty

    no one else would try it
     
  13. #13
    AgentHubcap

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    I had an old IPA that lost the hop flavor and aroma and an orange wheat that was a bit too sweet. Mixing the two resulted in a fantastic beer that I'm really tempted to try and replicate in a single recipe.
     
  14. #14
    BikerBrewer

    Junior Member  

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    We've got a small brew pub near here that does that all the time. He usually has about 5 or so beers on tap and by mixing them comes up with another 5 or 6.
     
  15. #15
    Homercidal

    Licensed Sensual Massage Therapist.  

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    Mixing beers?? THAT'S CRAZY!

    Yes, I've done it.

    FYI - I saw a Black and Tan kit in the store the other day. 6-pack with 3 Bass Pale Ales and 3 Stouts.
     
  16. #16
    DPBISME

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 5, 2013
    All the time.... I have a Kolsch and an IPA on tap right now... both are good beers but when mixed half and half they are great.

    I also BLEND beers in my kegged if on has TOO MUCH of something and the other has TOO LITTLE of something.

    I ahave also mixed to kegs to gether and taken them to a party because I wanted to get rid of them of use the newly emptied keg...
     
  17. #17
    H-Balm

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    Mixing beers is not new at all.
    Back in the old days, different batches, strengths, and shades were mixed commonly.

    It is yet another great part of homebrewing, the ability to experiment...trying things that are not readily available!
     
  18. #18
    ContinuousD

    Active Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
  19. #19
    bwarbiany

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    I guess I'm not the only one!
     
  20. #20
    urbanmyth

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    I had a Belgian single and an Oktoberfest on tap at the same time. 25/75 of those two made a really good blend.
     
  21. #21
    Mexicanconnection2002

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    Before I started brewing I had a keg of Newcastle Brown and a keg of Bells Expedition Stout on tap and mixed 50/50 was excellent. We called it Blackcastle.
     
  22. #22
    cheezydemon3

    Banned

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    I had frankenkeg at one point.

    I made 7 or so 6 gallon batches. I had a keg with a mediocre pale ale 1/2 full. I added the extra gallon from each brew (several weeks apart) to the franken keg. It went well for a while, but after a blacker than your soul stout gallon was added, it was a porter for the last 3 additions despite them being light colored.

    It was interesting, but left me with some nice combinations that will be impossible to replicate.
     
  23. #23
    whitehause

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    My Zombie dust and Pliny make a pretty good mix.(they're on taps next to each other so had to do it)
     
    Montanaandy likes this.
  24. #24
    tripplehazzard

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    I want to do a strawberry wheat and a peanut butter stout. Black and tan style.... peanut butter jelly time!
     
  25. #25
    Montanaandy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    I have been doing this for quite some time although I have only mixed within a few specific styles (i.e. PA's and IPA's and IIPA's). Have had some really nice results/surprises and will continue to experiment.
     
  26. #26
    kagythings

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    My local brew pub mixes an Apricot Wheat & IIPA about 30/70 that's nice, they call it an 18 since it's twice as good as a #9. it's the only way I can get my wife to drink an IIPA.
    I also went to another brew pub that mixed Strawberry Wheat and Double Chocolate Stout and called it a chocolate dipped strawberry. That one was hard to get a good ratio but they did make adjustments as I drank it until it tasted right so no complaints there.
    There is a Firestone Walker anniversary beer available that is a blend of quite a few different beers they brew and it is delicious. I'd recommend trying that blend if you can find it.
     
  27. #27
    CityOChampBrew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    With a baseball bat?
     
  28. #28
    torstensson

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    Had a black and tan with a Pale Ale from Brooklyn Brewery and a Guinnes not that long ago.

    The taste was very different from an ordinary beer. Cant say it was bad, probably need to try it a couple more times since its a very odd taste.

    The funny thing was when I ordered it. Did it at a quite ordinary pub and the bartender who never heard of it, got real exicited and had one as well. Later in the evening there where several people aorund the bar drinking black and tan.
     
  29. #29
    tennesseean_87

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    I did a Belgian Black and tan when one of my bottles of Belgian Imp Stout was flat and I had some Belgian PA on hand. It was pretty good!
     
  30. #30
    Piratwolf

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    Right now I have a very malty Coffee Vanilla Porter on tap next to a very light-bodied, slightly overcarbed Rye Mild. The Rye really makes the Porter pop. Makes me want to brew a Rye Porter next... hmmmm...
     
  31. #31
    QuercusMax

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    I've poured a too-sweet, too-estery, underhopped homebrew IPA on top of half a glass of KBC Porter from Trader Joe's. The commercial porter was not very good - too astringent and burnt, but together they made a nice B&T. I was almost ready too pour it out, but I was able to save it.
     
  32. #32
    nathanthn

    Active Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    The best mix I ever made was a smoked porter with a winter spruce ale, we called it a "burning forest"
     
  33. #33
    mrdauber64

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 6, 2013
    I mixed a Strawberry Blonde ale and a Chocolate Milk Stout. It was very good!
     
  34. #34
    blueseamonkey

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2013
  35. #35
    ultravista

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2013
    Great discussion ... it has me thinking about brewing an Arrogant Bastard/Westvletern 12 clone with some oatmeal & dark malts. I'll probably never get to do it but the hybrid brew is tempting.
     
  36. #36
    cswest

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2013
    I blended a Berliner Weisse with a Pale Ale for an all beer shandy. Turned out great.
     
  37. #37
    NateLTB

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2013
    I did two fresh hop ales at the end of last summer and ended up with an extremely hoppy pale ale and an extremely malty amber ale. The two of them mixed together was amazing.

    Somebody earlier mentioned the Firestone Walker Anniversary blends and I need to say that they are amazing! I don't see how a blended beer could get better than that.
     
  38. #38
    GrogNerd

    mean old man

    Posted Mar 7, 2013
    for the hell of it? no

    purely for scientific research, yes
     
  39. #39
    Krovitz

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2013
    I gave my boss a Christmas ale I brewed. He drank about half of it, topped it off with miller lite and said "now it's perfect." Guess who doesn't get free homebrew anymore.

    I've never really tried mixing that I can remember. Some of these posts sound pretty interesting though. My girlfriend loves snakebites, I think its cider and Bass but I'm not sure.
     
  40. #40
    nybrew13

    New Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2013
    Bluepoint brewery on long island does a black and blue (oatmeal stout and blueberry ale) One of my favorites!!
     
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