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Adding smoke flavor

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divrguy

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Been brewing for a while but never added smoke flavor to a beer. Recently had a smoked porter and would like to add a touch of smoke flavor to a rye. Anyone give me a good starting point on a touch of smoke flavor? I don want it to take over the beer just have a slight smoked quality that I think would compliment the rye. Any thoughts?
 
How about Rauchmalz, perhaps 1 pound in a 5 gallon batch. There's also the cherry wood smoked malt (Breiss?) as an option. For a subtle flavor about a pound would work or you could adjust up/down.
 
You could go w/ a peat smoked malt which Stone uses in their Smoked Porter. The recipe in their book calls for 4.9 oz per 5 gallon batch or 2.5% of the total grain bill.
 
You could go w/ a peat smoked malt which Stone uses in their Smoked Porter. The recipe in their book calls for 4.9 oz per 5 gallon batch or 2.5% of the total grain bill.

The smoke very subdued in Stone's Smoked Porter, you'd want to go a little heavier than that to get a noticeable character from it.
 
Stone's smoked porter has next to no smoke character to it. They could easily name it after any other ingredient in the beer. Stone's 120L crystal malt porter or something...
 
You'll want to be really careful with peat malt. It doesn't just add smokiness but also that astringent peaty flavor at larger amounts. I use 2 oz in a wee heavy with a 23lb grain bill and I can tell its there.

If your lhbs has some, ask of you can try a little bit. Just eat a few kernels of the peat and the rauchmalt. Use the one you like best.
 
Do you want the smoke to be a subtle flavor or a prominent part of the beer's character? You said you wanted a touch but as you can see, there's a lot of variance on what people think is "enough" smoke. You can get a subtle flavor with 5% rauchmalt but at least 25% to start to move the smoke into a prominent flavor component.
 
ReverseApacheMaster said:
Do you want the smoke to be a subtle flavor or a prominent part of the beer's character? You said you wanted a touch but as you can see, there's a lot of variance on what people think is "enough" smoke. You can get a subtle flavor with 5% rauchmalt but at least 25% to start to move the smoke into a prominent flavor component.

I tasted a few grains of each and I like the flavor of the rauch. I really only want a hint of it so I think I'll do a test batch or two in the 2 gallon size and and use about 2% of the grain bill on a recipe I know what it tastes like already. Thx
 
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