I have one that I have done a few time. Go to North West Brewer Supply http://www.nwbrewers.com/, its called #13003 Chuckanut Brown Ale. This is a good one. It is a english brown ale.
Yeah no problem man....thats why this place is here.
Since all the other grains are steeping grains you could just steep those in a bag like normal.
ok here is what my book says and it's pretty easy, I'd write this down bc I use it ALL the time to convert recipies:
AG to Extract:
Amount of pale malt X .8125=amount of LME
Amount of pale malt X .6875=amount of DME
(there is also one for wheat malt but we don't need that here...)
SO for this current recipe you would need
7 X .8125=5.68 LB of LME.....just round to 5.5 or you could probubly get away with 6.66 (2 cans) if you buy them that way but I'm not exactly sure....I know it would boost the alcohol content though
OR
7 X.6875=4.81 LB of DME....could probubly just round to 5 LB
Probubly the best thing to do if you buy in cans would be...
convert 1 can of LME (3.33 LB) to Grain then get the remainder from DME...
SO:
Amount of LME X 1.23= grain
3.33 X 1.23= 4
so we'd take 3 lb of grain and convert it to DME
3 X .6875=2
SO you'd need 1 can of LME and 2 LB of DME then the rest of the ingredients...
Always the same. However, I've heard that one brand (Laaglanders) has less fermentables and leaves your beer with a higher final gravity. I've never used it, though, I don't know that for sure. Otherwise, I use whatever brand my LHBS has.