I did not get this brewed last week as planned. I made the candy tonight...it was actually enjoyable doing it knowing what it was for....it turned out great and I thinned it with corn syrup and will brew this friday.
Hey guys,
I'm in the process of getting everything together for an Amber Ale. It's a Northern Brewer all-grain kit which I'm turning into a partial mash (http://www.northernbrewer.com/shop/american-amber-ale-all-grain-kit.html).
However, I wondered whether adding the caramel syrup would work for this recipe as well as it does for the OPs. Or is there some extra intricacy that I'm missing?
Thanks!
Adding a pound of candi syrup will increase your OG and dry out your FG, so you'll have a drier, stronger beer with a greater caramel presence. It would probably be a nice addition to that kit according to the recipe listed in the instructions.
What's your plan for turning this brew into a PM recipe? Are you adding extract to the kit to make it stronger, or reducing the kit's grainbill and adding extract up to 1.047 to make it easier to brew? If you're adding a couple pounds of extract to a brew that's already 1.047, and then adding a pound of candi syrup on top of that, you're getting into the territory of making an imperial caramel amber ale, which may or may not be what you're going for.
Thanks so much for the feedback.
My plan is to pull back on the grain bill and substitute in some LME (about .70 to the lb depending on the efficiency of the mash) in order to make the brewing process easier.
I'd prefer to keep it more on the sessionable side rather than verging into imperial territory.
Perhaps adding an lb of the candi syrup in place of an 1lb of the LME would be a good plan in order to keep the brew closer to the intended ABV?
Candi syrup, if measured by the weight of the sugar you put in and not the weight of the syrup you get out (which should be a bit higher as you're adding water), should have higher potential than LME. A one-for-one swap of the two will increase the gravity a bit, though not much if you're just doing a pound.
Does Northern Brewer send the kit grains pre-mixed or are the grains separate? If you're replacing pre-mixed amber ale grains with LME, you're changing the beer because you're losing some of your caramel malts. If your grains are separated upon arrival, replacing base malt with pale LME (probably up to about half your grainbill) should be alright. If your grains are premixed, you might want to use amber LME instead - it won't be the same as if you did the all-grain kit as-is, but amber LME will replace some of the caramel grains you're removing by reducing the grain bill.
Thinking of giving this a go but I cant get Crystal 80 where I live here in Europe.
Would Carabohemian be a decent substitute?
https://bsgcraftbrewing.com/weyermann-cara-bohemian
I have a 6-1/2 gal batch that's been in the fermenter for 24 days today. Obviously it ready to keg/bottle but I'm trying to complete a keezer build. May have to go ahead and keg it and stick it in the frig until I can complete my keezer....
24 days!? Sheesh, what are you waiting for. I had 1.012 after 5 days, and finished at 1.007 after 8 days. 2nd time I brewed this, what a nice, smooth (with a hint of caramel sweetness) amber ale.
Patience grasshopper. When one can walk rice paper with caramel amber ale in hand and not leave sign, it is ready. THEN you will experience a blended mellowness seldom experienced in 8 days.
NOW GO FORTH, and be one with the beer....
Yeah, carabohemian should make a great substitute! It's slightly lighter in color but it shouldn't make a huge difference and from the description, it looks like it has exactly the flavors I used the crystal 80 for in the original recipe.
Thanks for your quick reply.
I guess this is a good Spring or Fall beer so I'll try plan it in for sometime before Easter. If not then sometime in the late Summer.
.....
KingBrian, I just kegged my first keg of what should be a smooth tasting Caramel Amber Ale. Thanks for the recipe!!
I won't have my keezer completed for another week or so. Right not, it's on 13 psi sitting in my beer frig. I'm new to kegging and wanted to know where you thought the sweetspot is for carbonating this brew?
Just leave it at 13psi for 2 weeks and you should be fine. That's where I have my regulator set, my keezer is at 38 degrees, and in 2 weeks my beers are ready to drink.
I had a pretty pronounced hop flavour right up front. I thought it was from using leaf hops instead of pellets. Did you use pellets or leaf?
So I bottled this yesterday using the Candy Syrup for primimg.
Aimed for 2.6 volumes.
Will leave it for a week and see how it's going, hopefully it will be ready within 2 weeks.