BillyBeer
Well-Known Member
Yes I can. Thank you for the advice.
Hey BM, what do you think adding a half pound of Special B will do to this recipe? I have 3# of it and was considering adding a half pound, and using the rest of your ingredients, thanks.
I think I will try it then, not one of your recipes have dissapointed me yet, thanks for ALL of them.I think that would be nice. Some nuttiness added?
ALL GRAIN - 5 Gallons
8.00 lb Pale Malt (2 Row) US (2.0 SRM)
2.00 lb Munich Malt - 10L (10.0 SRM)
1.00 lb Caramel/Crystal Malt - 30L (30.0 SRM)
1.00 lb Chocolate Malt (350.0 SRM)
1.00 lb Oats, Flaked (1.0 SRM)
0.50 oz Fuggles [4.52%] (60 min)
0.50 oz Fuggles [4.20%] (2 min)
0.25 tsp Irish Moss (Boil 10.0 min)
1.00 cup Malto-Dextrine (Boil 20.0 min)
4.00 oz Lactose (Boil 15.0 min)
1 Pkgs London Ale (Wyeast Labs #1028)
Mash Schedule: Single Infusion, Full Body, Batch Sparge
Total Grain Weight: 13.00 lb
Mash In Add 4.06 gal of water at 170.5 F 158.0 F 45 min
Mash Out Add 2.50 gal of water at 206.7 F 175.0 F 15 min
Primary 1 Week (60 Degrees)
Secondary 10 Days (60 Degrees)
Kegged and Force Carbed or Primed and Bottled
This was a very good, very rich Porter. Nice sweetness and great mouthfeel. Friends who shy away from Stout loved this milder (but creamier) dark beer.
I brewed this about 2.5 months ago ... I subbed EKG for the Fuggles cause I had 'em around. After 3 weeks in the bottle it was like, eh, fine but not great. But after 5-6 weeks in the bottle? Hot damn!! Seriously, it's a little like drinking a delicious roasty milkshake, it's so smooth and creamy. Part of me wants to pour it over ice cream, it's so good!
Brought it to a party last week and lots of people were seriously impressed. I'm really bummed that I drank so many before it really came together. But as soon as it did I threw 6 in the back of the closet to be discovered in a few months, when I'm sure it'll get even better. Great beer - highly recommended!
Made this yesterday. Everything went well except when I tasted my sample it had what I would describe as a slightly burnt after taste. I'm not sure if I scorched the wort or if it was maybe the chocolate malt as I haven't done an AG with that dark a malt yet.Hopefully I didn't screw it up.
Just brewed this last night and pitched S-05 (all I had on hand). Looks and smells great! Just a quick question / thought about the IBUs. They calculate to about 6. This seems kind of low - should they be higher? All of the other BM recipes I have made have been great, so I am trusting this one also but I was just wondering.
Just bottled this last night. Ended up with 61 12 oz. bottles ! OG was 1.064 and FG was 1.028 for an ABV of 4.7. Tasted awesome and I am looking forward to "testing" one next week. Thanks again for the recipe BM !
BM you have great recipes! I am thinking of brewing this and your Bass Clone for st paddys day and making them into black and tans, you think they will float right?
Hmmmm. Hard to tell.
A typical back and tan requires a lighter ABV on top (Dry Stout) and a heavier ABV on the bottom (Pale Ale). Using a Porter at around 5.5+ and a similar ABV pale might get you too close for clear separation.
This was my second all grain, and everything went flawlessly (except for not having any sanitizer...) hit all my mash temps perfectly, and ended with an OG of 1.061 on the dot. Thanks for the recipe!
So the first post suggests 1 week primary 10 days secondary, but then... strait to keg, couple days and drink? or would it still be a bit too green then and should be aged in the keg a bit?
I'm 11 days in primary right now (OG 1.60, my first AG attempt), meant to move to secondary after a week, but been busy... can't wait! but will if more aging after the secondary really helps this one out.
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