I brewed a partial mash version recently but just tried it yesterday. If anyone is looking for a PM variation on some of the prior ones listed or simply doesn't want to look through 30 pages to find it, this one came out damn good, I must say.
5 gallon batch:
2.5# White wheat
2.5# american 2 row
14 oz quick oats
2 oz dextrine malt
2# pilsner LME
1oz Sterling Pellets
1 tsp ground corriander
1/2 tsp ground valencia orange peel (McCorrmicks)
I ground the barley, white wheat, and oats together with a medium to fine crush. Mashed in a bag at 155 70 minutes in 2.75 gallons filtered water.
Dunk sparged in that pot 5 minutes then dunked sparged in second pot of 2.5 gallon 170 degree water. 90 minute boil, added hops at 60 minutes. I used Sterling hops since it was the only Noble type hops I had, and had the correct profile and AA. IBU's probably a little high around 21 or so. Corriander added with 10 minutes remaining, orange peel with 5 minutes remaining. Cooled to around 70 and pitch 1 pack rehydrated Notty, fermented in mid-upper 60's 2 weeks (it was pretty much done in 3 days though) then straight to keg. Force carbed/crashed x 4 days or so and drank the first one last night.
The color is really perfect, white/yellow, more like what Wayne describes as the original than what is sold now which has darker yellow-orange color, not a true white. To me the bitterness is also excellent, very subtle, comes on in the finish. The corriander seems right on but the orange is only slightly detectable and I agree with others, it needs to be scaled up a bit unless you are always going to serve with a slice, in which case this amount is probably fine. The body is not nearly as thin as most seem to be reporting, maybe because of the dextrine, or the mash temp? Overall it came out great and I will definitely be making this again. I will probably increase the orange peel to 1 tsp and go 1.25 tsp on the corriander. I think the 3:1 wont get you the orange flavor with the McCorrmicks since it probably isn't that fresh as what Wayne had available.
Anyway, just wanted to keep the thread going and list my version. Thanks much Wayne, I know my ratios are off a little but pretty close to teh original and very good for a PM brewer since you can get white wheat in 5 lbs and use half and save half and the oats come in 42 oz so the 14 oz is a third, then throw in the 2 oz carapils and you have an even 6 lbs grain which is kind of the upper limits for many PM brewers.
Let me know what you all think.