It's been 2 yrs since the last post in this thread and I'm interested again. Sadly, I lost my notes for like the first 20 brews I made so this is from memory. I've brewed countless beers since then and I want to get back to nailing this recipe down. I moved on to AG shortly after my last post on this thread so it will have to be a different approach. My original recipe was better than I gave it credit for. The tea flavor came through after some time although the lemon did not. All in all, it turned out pretty good. So, 2 yrs. later, I really want to nail this down. I could use some advice, hoping that someone has played around with this idea a little. First, I'm wondering what style of beer would lend itself to the tea flavor the best. My goal is to have a low ABV, mild flavor profile, with a "distinct" tea flavor. I was thinking maybe a mild, an ESB, or just something very tame so that the tea flavor can shine.
The Plan: I think maybe some good tea leaves in the mash is a possibilty. If not, then just tea leaves at flameout worked pretty good last time. I just need to use more. If I can't pinpoint a solid way to mash the tea leaves then my plan is to add the leaves at flameout AND make a small amount of concentrated tea and add that to the secondary. The hop profile will have to be subtle so that the tea can come through. Tea leaves are delicious but they just cant compete with hop bittterness, flavor, etc. To me, iced tea is delicious and I think it would be very compatable with a mild tasting lawnmower beer. If anyone has any suggestions, let me have it. Like I said, it's been 2 yrs but I WILL make this work. I could really use some help though.
ALSO: Although IPA is not my favorite style, and I don't want THIS beer to be an IPA, I think that a tea flavored IPA might be very good with a tea flavor. It would just take the right hop schedule.........
The Plan: I think maybe some good tea leaves in the mash is a possibilty. If not, then just tea leaves at flameout worked pretty good last time. I just need to use more. If I can't pinpoint a solid way to mash the tea leaves then my plan is to add the leaves at flameout AND make a small amount of concentrated tea and add that to the secondary. The hop profile will have to be subtle so that the tea can come through. Tea leaves are delicious but they just cant compete with hop bittterness, flavor, etc. To me, iced tea is delicious and I think it would be very compatable with a mild tasting lawnmower beer. If anyone has any suggestions, let me have it. Like I said, it's been 2 yrs but I WILL make this work. I could really use some help though.
ALSO: Although IPA is not my favorite style, and I don't want THIS beer to be an IPA, I think that a tea flavored IPA might be very good with a tea flavor. It would just take the right hop schedule.........