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Body In Oatmeal Stout

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Breck09

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Well I brewed the Oatmeal Stout kit from NB a while back and kegged it two weeks ago. I missed my numbers and the abv came out at around 3.5% or so. Could the low abv be what has caused it to be a little thinner then I thought it would be? I'm thinking yes but figured why not ask. Thanks.
 
All-Grain or Partial? I was just looking at the All Grain PDF the grain bill appears a little light on grain and oats so does the Partial at least IMHO... not sure the low ABV caused it to be thinner or being thinner caused it to be a low ABV. Oatmeal stouts should be 4.2 to 5.9 %
the kits (at least on paper) seem to light in fermentables and in non-fermentable dextrins that give stout their nice creamy mouth feel.
 
It was the all grain version. Its a good beer it just doesn't seem to have the mouthfeel that I expected from an Oatmeal Stout. Maybe have too look around for another recipe of the style. Probably try the one in Brewing Classic Styles.
 
It was the all grain version. Its a good beer it just doesn't seem to have the mouthfeel that I expected from an Oatmeal Stout. Maybe have too look around for another recipe of the style. Probably try the one in Brewing Classic Styles.

Mash temperatures play a part as well. My recipe is very much like the one in Brewing Classic Styles, and I often mash it at 156-158!
 
Yooper said:
Mash temperatures play a part as well. My recipe is very much like the one in Brewing Classic Styles, and I often mash it at 156-158!

I can't remember what the mash temp in the recipe says but I know whatever it was I hit it perfect. I know it wasn't 156-158 though. I will for try out a new recipe though as I love the style.
 
Not familiar with the Kit recipe, but what were your original and final gravity and what were the target numbers?
 
I can't remember what the mash temp in the recipe says but I know whatever it was I hit it perfect. I know it wasn't 156-158 though. I will for try out a new recipe though as I love the style.

If you like a coffee-roasty stout, you could try my recipe. I've made it a number of times (drinking it now) and it's got an understated roast that I like.
 
I bought this (PM) as a base to modify for my version of a breakfast stout. I put the ingredients in BeerSmith and it came out very low for IBU's, OG, and ABV, so I added an extra lb of Marris Otter, .5 lb chocolate malt, and 1 oz fuggles for 60 min.

This beer is currently sitting on 4 oz coffee beans and 4 oz cocao nibs in the secondary, but when I transferred it at 4 weeks, my sample was delicious. Unfortunately, I broke my hydrometer on brewday so I don't have an accurate OG reading, but it definitely had some body to it and nice roasty/chocolaty flavor at room temp. It was so good, in fact, that I thought about bottling it rather than risk "ruining" it with chocolate and coffee.

So, to make a long story short...if you make this again, you may want to try adding a little extra malt/hops to get it into the normal range for oatmeal stouts.
 

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