b-radbrew
Well-Known Member
Brown malt brings the party straight to your mouth! It's a strange malt in the way that it's not quite a speciality malt and therefore you can vary the proportion quite a bit (I've seen all the way from 2% to 50% of the grist). I was doing some comparisons of porters made with two malts: pale plus any other, and matching the resulting SRM (to around 25-30). Brown malt was the best by far as all the others (patent, chocolate) were quite unidimensional. Where black patent provides a clear roast, burnt, coffee note, brown malt brings instead layers of coffee, toast, nuts, slightly burnt cake, and some sweetness. In small quantities it's nutty and toasty, but when you bring it to 20% of the grist and above it's a bit like a big, deep instrumental section compared to the single, loud solo guitar of patent malt. It's pretty much *the* porter malt and it blends well with other roast malts (that can balance the toast and bring in more colour and deeper and sharper coffee / chocolate notes). It also has a good place in any stout (specially stronger ones) as far as your definition of stout is not a Guinness clone.
So I ended up doing a revamp of my original receipe and added brown malt. Holy crap what a difference! I went through and really focused on each ingredient and played with the percentages while incorporating the Brown malt. I backed off my Munich and Chocolate by a couple ounces each and took those quantities for my Brown addition. I don't have my recipe handy at the moment but this is sooooo much better than the first round which almost came out tasting like a Guiness so far. So glad I went with your recommendation on this malt. Just brewed a couple days ago and can't wait to see how it plays out. Thanks again, JKaranka!