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- Apr 23, 2008
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Sounds like possibly too much black patent??
Sounds like possibly too much black patent??
My LHBS never has Notingham. I have a package of Wyeast London ESB Ale 1968 at home. Would this be a total abomination? If so, what would be the best substitute for Notty in this case?
TIA,
John
I checked Wyeast's website and the 1968 strain does not list Porter as one of the preferred styles for that yeast (although I do not think it would be "an abomination". I recently made this beer and harvested Wyeast Irish Ale off of a Stout I had in the fermenter. Wyeast London Ale and British Ale would also work very well for a Robust Porter. If you want to stick with a dry yeast you might try Safale S-04 instead of Notty's.
This will make 5.5 gallons of Porter. Preboil is 3.5 gallons.
3.5# 2 Row
4.33# Extra Light DME
1# Chocolate Malt
1# Crystal 40
4 oz. Black Patent
1 oz. Roasted Barley
8 oz. Flaked Barley
Mash at 150 degrees for 60 minutes
Add DME pre-boil
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.
This ferments vigorously, so use a blow off or be prepared to wipe up some beer.
Ferment for 2 weeks, then rack to keg or secondary.
I brewed this on 18SEP. I took a hydro reading last night after 15 days in the primary and got a reading of 1.020. I am going to take another reading in about 6 hours. If it is still 1.020, what should I do? Leave it in the primary? Rack to secondary?
Just got 5 gallons of this into the fermenter @ 1.074 SG ... did a PM, so the slightly high OG is likely due to splitting the base malt 5# grain/4# XLDME. House smells great, I can't WAIT to try this... I bumped up the roasted barley to 2oz, to hopefully make it a bit of a "coffee porter" without using actual coffee, but other than that, followed the recipe.
Well, I forgot the Flaked Barley... not sure exactly how that will affect it. I had crushed the whole grain bill, and then threw that in a bag... of course, come brew day, I just used the crushed grain in the bag and forgot about the flaked barley that hadn't needed to be crushed. C'est la vie... RDWHAHB.![]()
Congratulations in providing me with my first blowoff.
Fortunately, I was fermenting in a SOFC which contained it. It was a nice little surprise to go to the garage and see beer leaking out of the SOFC as I was leaving for work, though. Interestingly enough I was using a blowoff tube which got clogged enough to let her blow. I rinsed it out and put it back in place this morning so we'll see if she blows again today.![]()
I love your evaporative cooling method.
I've got a ten gallon batch of this stuff in the mash as I type.