My Birthday Imperial Stout | HomeBrewTalk.com - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Community.

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk by donating:

  1. Dismiss Notice
  2. We have a new forum and it needs your help! Homebrewing Deals is a forum to post whatever deals and specials you find that other homebrewers might value! Includes coupon layering, Craigslist finds, eBay finds, Amazon specials, etc.
    Dismiss Notice

My Birthday Imperial Stout

Discussion in 'All Grain & Partial Mash Brewing' started by MetallHed, Jan 15, 2011.

 

  1. #1
    MetallHed

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 15, 2011
    I did an imperial stout on my birthday. My thinking is to leave it in primary until July 12th, bottle, then leave in bottles until January 12th, 2012 (my birthday).

    I've never done an Imperial Stout before, and because it was MY birthday brew, I made up a recipe going off of personal knowledge (or lack thereof). I wanted to make it my own, and thought it would be a nice tradition. Maybe by the time I'm 80 I will have a respectable IS.

    I split it into two 1-gallon jugs, and used US-04 in one and US-05 in the other. I figured I would compare the two and see what happens. *This is the first time I have re-hydrated dry yeast.* I went to sleep and woke up four hours later and they were already fermenting away. :D

    Smelled feckin' delicious... it's going to take all my will power to not try it before the year is up...

    [​IMG]

    Here is the recipe, critique if you can, and throw in suggestions or thoughts on how it might turn out.

    SG - 1.084
    Est. FG - 1.020-1.022
    Est. IBU - 79
    Est. SRM - 42
    Est. 78% efficiency - :D

    3.5 lbs Briess Two-Row
    2 oz. Crystal 120L
    8 oz. American Chocolate Malt
    6 oz. Flaked Wheat

    .5 oz. U.S. Kent Goldings (60 min.)
    .25 oz. U.S. Kent Goldings (30 min.)
    .25 oz. U.S. Hallertau (30 min.)
    .25 oz. U.S. Kent Goldings (15 min.)
    .25 oz. U.S. Hallertau (15 min.)

    152* Mash (75 min.)
    170* Sparge (10 min.)

    Final volume - 1.5 Gallons

    :mug:
     
  2. #2
    wonderbread23

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 15, 2011
    The only thing jumping out to me is the lack of roasted barley. I prefer a big charge of this in my imperial stouts. Cool idea on the yeast split. Those two strains should make a significant difference in the beers.
     
  3. #3
    flabyboy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 15, 2011
    Is it safe to leave in primary for 6 months? Never heard of anybody aging in the primary that long. Just wondering
     
  4. #4
    Poobah58

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Jan 15, 2011
    Not a stout w/o roasted barley. looks more like a barleywine or Black IIPA with the IBU/SG ratio you got...
     
  5. #5
    MetallHed

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 16, 2011
    I thought about the roasted barley, and actually had it in the original recipe, but decided against it in favor of a sweeter flavor. I love me some stouts, but sometimes I feel the coffee/roasted flavor is over the top on some, so I wanted to go the other way.

    I'm not exactly sure how much of an idea you can get from tasting the sweet wort, but if that was any indication of the final product, it was a fantastic chocolatey/caramel taste with a nice hop bite.

    I've read about people leaving it in primary for that long (mostly due to forgeting about it), but maybe I will only leave it in primary for two months and just bottle age it until January. That way I know my yeast won't be too pooped to carb it up.

    Seems to fit in the Imperial Stout catagory, from what I've read. As per BJCP guidelines, they only state the abundance of roasted malts, not specifically roasted barley; as far as I know (again, not an expert in stouts, or any beer), chocolate and crystal are both roasted malts. All of the other guidelines fit fine (this is what I went off of when making the recipe).

    I looked at the guidelines for barleywine, and the color doesn't fit for my brew. I could not find any guidelines for a black IIPA, is this a newer style?
     
  6. #6
    fishkid

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 16, 2011
    FWIW, I don't believe crystal and chocolate fall into the same roasted category. Crystal malt is roasted while still green/wet but chocolate malt is kilned first then roasted. Chocolate malt does fall into the same category as roasted barley however, so you might get a sufficient roasty character from the chocolate malt.

    That being said, if you're not going to enter it into a competition, you can call it whatever you'd like, and it looks like you've made a stout to me.

    In a competition I would be worried about the roast character not being forward enough as the guidelines state, "Dark fruit flavors meld with roasty, burnt, or almost tar-like sensations."

    In any case, good luck holding onto those beers for an entire year without drinking them...I don't believe I could do it :mug: Bottoms up!
     
  7. #7
    MetallHed

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 16, 2011
    Oh, okay. I thought that crystal went through the same process as chocolate and roasted malts. I will have to write on my notes to put in a quantity of roasted barley for next year.. unless this just turns out too good. heh heh

    This is for me, for my birthday; I won't be entering it into a competition. :D
     
  8. #8
    fishkid

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 16, 2011

    Looks delicious in that primary! You'll have to update us if you do decide to taste it a bit early! :tank:
     
  9. #9
    MetallHed

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 12, 2011
    I bottled after a month after reading some people getting off-flavors from the rubber stoppers in small batches, and needing the room...

    [​IMG]

    Tastes pretty damn good, so far, but I'm sure it will mature and evolve as time goes by. I just worry now about the flip top bottles. I've never used them; hopefully they'll carb up okay and won't ruin the beer!
     
  10. #10
    MetallHed

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 13, 2011
    Tasted the mixed yeast bottle today (had a half full bottle left from the US-04 and topped it off with the US-05 beer)... and holy crap.. for just throwing this together... it's freaking delish. Sweet with slight roasty-ness. No alcohol notes that I can taste. I've done good holding out so far, so it shouldn't be a problem to keep until January, but I can't wait to taste it then, cuz it's damn good now.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page

Group Builder