Another vote for no fruit addition. Just see what comes of the oats and that yeast.
I have my own method for making something similiar for my oatmeal stout.... and it does add a nice nutty/berry flavor.....
As for my recipie... oh gees I will share any of my other recipies... this one right now is a secret LOL its really the only recipie I have made I think could win ALOT of awards or even be a flagship brew if I ever get the brewpub I allways dreamed about open but I will give you a hint
In all the time I've spent on HBT, that is a first. Freakin hilarious.
I am glad I could amuse you ... and with the risk of making enemies... I will take your opinion with more seriousness once you start brewing your own recipies that are more then sleightly modded extract kits or AG brews that someone else came up with..... Or when you have plans in place to start selling what you brew........
Not trying to be offensive but its kinda hard to keep quiet when someone is belittling something your trying to accomplish.... Or maybe I just took it wrong........
I am glad I could amuse you ... and with the risk of making enemies... I will take your opinion with more seriousness once you start brewing your own recipies that are more then sleightly modded extract kits or AG brews that someone else came up with..... Or when you have plans in place to start selling what you brew........
Not trying to be offensive but its kinda hard to keep quiet when someone is belittling something your trying to accomplish.... Or maybe I just took it wrong........
THAT being said...
chefmike here are the links to the roasted oats I promised
http://i148.photobucket.com/albums/s8/michael90t/HomeBrewing/DSCF0490.jpg
and
http://i148.photobucket.com/albums/s8/michael90t/HomeBrewing/DSCF0494.jpg
the lighting isnt the best but it give an idea for what I go for..........
Mike - Glad to see you figured out how to chill.
Everyone else - Some facts.
* 100% oat malt beers used to be fairly common in UK until about the turn of the 20th century.
* Fawcett's oat malt will make a hell of an oat-malt beer. I oughta know; I did one with 75%+ oat malt recently that turned out just fine. (Okay, it was an 'ale' ca. 1286 AD, but who's counting?) It has plenty of diastatic power, no matter what any website says.
* Oat malt does not, say again not require rice hulls, as it is a husked grain. Flaked oats in that proportion, well, yeah. But not oat malt. The corn itself is much less plump than even Pils malt, and will require narrowing of the mill gap to get a good crush. The husk:endosperm ratio is relatively high. Adding rice hulls will only increase the husk matter, increasing the possibility of increasing unwanted 'grainy' flavor effects.
That's about all. Don't fear oat malt. I'm finishing a glass of uncarbonated Tudor Hopp'd Beere with 25% oat malt, and it's goooooooood. (I love bottling day!)
Cheers,
Bob
Mike - Glad to see you figured out how to chill.
Everyone else - Some facts.
* 100% oat malt beers used to be fairly common in UK until about the turn of the 20th century.
* Fawcett's oat malt will make a hell of an oat-malt beer. I oughta know; I did one with 75%+ oat malt recently that turned out just fine. (Okay, it was an 'ale' ca. 1286 AD, but who's counting?) It has plenty of diastatic power, no matter what any website says.
* Oat malt does not, say again not require rice hulls, as it is a husked grain. Flaked oats in that proportion, well, yeah. But not oat malt. The corn itself is much less plump than even Pils malt, and will require narrowing of the mill gap to get a good crush. The husk:endosperm ratio is relatively high. Adding rice hulls will only increase the husk matter, increasing the possibility of increasing unwanted 'grainy' flavor effects.
That's about all. Don't fear oat malt. I'm finishing a glass of uncarbonated Tudor Hopp'd Beere with 25% oat malt, and it's goooooooood. (I love bottling day!)
Cheers,
Bob
Been thinking I'd like to brew a 100% oat beer with Fawcett's oat malt as the base and a little golden naked oat malt for some complexity. Further reading had me coming across warnings of oat beers have an undesirable astringency or tartness. Did you notice any glaring off-flavors from the 75%+ oat beer? Thanks.
Why not try 6 row for diastatic power. Then do a Step/Cereal mash with rice hulls to get a proper lauter/sparge.
Not glaring, no. It is different than mostly-barley beers? Hell, yes. Oats have a flavor all their own, just like barley and wheat. I find the difference refreshing. So long as you keep that in mind, you'll have an interesting experience.
Cheers,
Bob