A lot of the clone recipes on this page are using cocoa powder instead of bittersweet chocolate. That could be the reason they are missing the intense chocolate flavor that Choklat has.
When using whole chocolate it is important to add it at the begining of the boil to volatize the oils in the chocolate, otherwise you will get poor head retention and an oily slick on top. See BYO article: https://byo.com/stories/item/313-brewing-with-chocolate
In my clone I am using semi-sweet chocolate chips and cocoa liquor (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_liquor) wich is basically unsweetened baking chocolate. I'm not going to bother with cocoa nibs in the secondary since there will be plenty of cocoa solids in the fermentor left over from the chocolate added durring the boil.
If you want a hit-you-over-the-head sweet chocolate flavor in your beer, you can add hersey's syrup with your priming sugar right before bottling. Just make sure to adjust the amount of priming sugar to compensate for how much sugar there is in the syrup you are adding.
When using whole chocolate it is important to add it at the begining of the boil to volatize the oils in the chocolate, otherwise you will get poor head retention and an oily slick on top. See BYO article: https://byo.com/stories/item/313-brewing-with-chocolate
In my clone I am using semi-sweet chocolate chips and cocoa liquor (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate_liquor) wich is basically unsweetened baking chocolate. I'm not going to bother with cocoa nibs in the secondary since there will be plenty of cocoa solids in the fermentor left over from the chocolate added durring the boil.
If you want a hit-you-over-the-head sweet chocolate flavor in your beer, you can add hersey's syrup with your priming sugar right before bottling. Just make sure to adjust the amount of priming sugar to compensate for how much sugar there is in the syrup you are adding.