EdWort
Well-Known Member
Ed what happened to the rest of that recipe? I remember you having yeast instructions and estimated OG and FG?
I don't know what happened to the database part. It just disappeared.
Ed what happened to the rest of that recipe? I remember you having yeast instructions and estimated OG and FG?
Ed, Question about this brew. I just hooked it up to the gas this past saturday and drew my first sip last night. It was very, very sweet. Unpleasantly so. The only change I had made was to use MO as my base. Also, my hydrometer broke that day so I didn't get an OG reading. But my 4 brews leading up to it had gotten 92% eff, and I had forgotten to reset BeerSmith from 75%, so I think I ended up with an OG around 1.085. My FG was 1.021 and I'm fairly certain I didn't have a stuck fermentation.
SO... back to my question (yes, I did have one). Is this supposed to be a sweet porter? I've never used malto dextrine before and am wondering if the sweetness could be a result of that. I realise that with a FG of 1.021 it'll be sweet regardless, but this, as I said, is just not pleasant. I'm hoping some extra vols will ease that up somewhat, but if you have any ideas I'd love to hear em. Thanks!
EDIT: I don't know if it's an aging thing too, but it's been 9 weeks since brewday.
I love sam adam's honey porter so if I were to add honey to this recipe; how much would I add and when would I add it?
Any thoughts about using US-05 instead of Nottingham on this?
11# 2 Row
1# Chocolate Malt
1# Crystal 40
4 oz. Black Patent
1 oz. Black Roasted Barley
8 oz. Flaked Barley
Mash at 150 degrees for 60 minutes
Add 8 oz. of Malto Dextrin to boil at 20 minutes
Hops.
1 oz. Northern Brewer at 60 min.
0.5 oz Cascade at 60 min.
Hydrate a package of Nottingham.
Ferment for 2 weeks, then rack to keg or secondary.
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I haven't went all grain yet, but getting ready. One thing I'd like to know about these recipes is how much it makes. I just plain don't understand how someone would know what amount of water to mash in with, and how much to batch sparge with etc. Please help me understand!!!!!
Biggest suggestion I can give is to try out beersmith software and keep reading on this forum.
To address your questions though, the general rule of thumb for most cases would be to mash with 1.25 quarts of water to 1LB of grain. So if you have a 10LB grain bill, you would mash with 12.5 quarts.
For batch sparging, I drain the mash/tun before putting sparge water in so my dead space is already taken up from the initial amount. So I take the amount I got from the initial run and subtract that from my pre-boil volume.
For example if I need 7.5 gallons to boil and I got 2 gallons from my first runnings, I would batch sparge with 2.25G twice to get the remaining 5.5G needed. This way I maximize the gravity without leaving too much liquid in the mash/tun.
So for the recipe given, where there are no volumes given, how would I know what the volume is supposed to be? I admit, I'm confused, please bear with me!
Ed bases his recipes or at least this one on a final ferment volume of 5.5G that way you have a little more to loose to trub and test with and hopefully get 5 gallons into the keg or bottled.
I still have a little of this on tap and it is quite good. It was also my first AG brew.
Cool, thanks. I'm looking for a not too heavy porter that has a decent hops finish. Is this one like that? See, I still really don't know enough to look at the grain bill and hopping schedule to tell!
Also I would like to make it a Coffee / Chocolate porter. Knowing your beer like no one else, what would you add to achieve this. Would you use coffee or coffee malt? And do you think there is enough chocolate in the beer already to balance with the added coffee.