Evan!
Well-Known Member
Every time I've tried Papazian's recipes (I just started homebrewing in July, and I've brewed 50 gallons since then
), without doctoring them, they come out very light. Not nearly as malty or alcoholic or fullbodied as I expect.
So, last week, I bought ProMash. Excellent program. Funny thing is, I entered the recipes that I used from Papazian (Irish Red + IPA), and neither of them fell within ProMash's acceptable gravity for their respective styles. And when I bottled them, I tasted them...and lo and behold, while they were both very clean and tasted excellent, they seemed a bit...light. Especially the IPA. The recipe came out with 1.046 SG, and ProMash's minimum for IPA is 1.056.
I guess, now that I have ProMash, I won't make that mistake again, but is Papazian just going light so that newcomers aren't frightened off by "big" beers?
So, last week, I bought ProMash. Excellent program. Funny thing is, I entered the recipes that I used from Papazian (Irish Red + IPA), and neither of them fell within ProMash's acceptable gravity for their respective styles. And when I bottled them, I tasted them...and lo and behold, while they were both very clean and tasted excellent, they seemed a bit...light. Especially the IPA. The recipe came out with 1.046 SG, and ProMash's minimum for IPA is 1.056.
I guess, now that I have ProMash, I won't make that mistake again, but is Papazian just going light so that newcomers aren't frightened off by "big" beers?