It's a darn good beer. The Whitbred yeast is key. Makes it nice and mellow. If you want it just a bit more mellow, cut out the roast barley and take your IBU's down to 20 and mash at around 157-158. It will really fit the Northern Brown and be a bit maltier than the recipe below.
That is what I have in my notes for any tweaks I'd make.
How can I take the IBU's to 20? Also, if I leave the roasted barley will that take the maltiness over the top?
Roasted barley lends more of a roast coffee bean flavor than a malt flavor. Removing it takes out the very small "bite" that exists in the regular recipe.
Jut reduce your hops to lower the IBU's.![]()
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...Im worry about fermenting this one as I have only been used a single fermentation, Ill quote the original post about this step:
Primary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp): 7 at 69 degrees
Additional Fermentation: Kegged and chilled to 37 degrees for 5 days
Secondary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp): 5 at 69 with gelatin
Ok, I dont keg my beer, I bottle them, does it make a difference?
What is the procedure of secondary fermentation? Should I just transfer the beer to another fermenter, add gelatin (how much?) and wait again? Should I use more yeast? Then after that time add the sugar, bottle my beer and wait again? Is that the right way?
I will really appreciate you help.
gravity reading of 1.025 after a month in primary with an OG at 1.033 sound a bit strange?
Going to brew this recipe this weekend and have a couple questions for BM or anyone that can help me out... Pretty new to AG and wanted to get this right! I have read through all 21 pages of this topic, but wanted to find out a couple things:
1. Since I'm going to have to ferment in two fermentorsdue due to the size, do I pitch two packs of yeast or divide one?
2. How long is the mash time and how much water per pound of grain did you use?
3. Was also confused on boil time, 60 or 90 min? It says both but says to add hops at 60min so is that @ 60 min of a 90 min boil or at beginning of boil?
THANKS!
Can't wait! -Kevin