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Cream Ale Cream of Three Crops (Cream Ale)

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Brewed this yesterday afternoon since the weather was so good. Mid October and 25 C!

Anyway, having no flaked corn, I cooked up a couple of pounds of cornmeal and added that to the mash. Furthermore, I spread an ounce of Saaz over the final ten minutes of the boil.

Smells great - bubbling merrily along this morning.

B
 
BierMuncher
Pardon my stupidity. This will be my first all grain brew and I don't want to mess up. I've read thru all the posts and I have just one question. Early on, you responded:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Liquidicem
Do you mill the rice and flaked corn or just toss it in the mash?

Just toss it in. I usually add it last to keep the mucky stuff at the top of the tun. Doesn't really matter probably since I use a big scoop of rice hulls in all my recipes.


So you add the flaked corn and Minute Rice to the mash tun AFTER the boil and do not boil them?

Thanks, This looks like a great cream style ale. - Snow
 
BierMuncher
Pardon my stupidity. This will be my first all grain brew and I don't want to mess up. I've read thru all the posts and I have just one question. Early on, you responded:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Liquidicem
Do you mill the rice and flaked corn or just toss it in the mash?

Just toss it in. I usually add it last to keep the mucky stuff at the top of the tun. Doesn't really matter probably since I use a big scoop of rice hulls in all my recipes.


So you add the flaked corn and Minute Rice to the mash tun AFTER the boil and do not boil them?

Thanks, This looks like a great cream style ale. - Snow

No, he adds it to the mash, but he puts the malt in first and then the rice and corn to keep it away from the bottom of the tun. That prevents them from causing a stuck sparge.
 
Tell you what...pull out a half pound of the 2-row and a half pound of the corn and replace with 1 pound of simple table sugar. That will really lighten up and dry out this beer. That's a pretty normal practice for me with my "house" beer.

This was back on page #50, and mentioned again in a few other posts. Do you still like the idea? If so, when do/did you add the table sugar?
 
Tell you what...pull out a half pound of the 2-row and a half pound of the corn and replace with 1 pound of simple table sugar. That will really lighten up and dry out this beer. That's a pretty normal practice for me with my "house" beer.

This was back on page #50, and mentioned again in a few other posts. Do you still like the idea? If so, when do/did you add the table sugar?

thats a great find!!! been doing a little of the same but adding instead of replacing:mug: just adjust the hops... subbing the sugar you want to add a little more ibu's(couple grams) and is a crowd pleaser...



Edit: the sugar gets the full boil.. :)
 
My brother-in-law wants me to brew a yellow fizzy for a family party in November. Since he'll be helping for the day (another term for being my personal brew kettle cleaning slave:D), who am I to argue ? This recipe seems like it would be my kind of yellow fizzy, but I don't want to pay 3$ a kilo for flaked maize. Would replacing the flaked maize with corn grits (seminola for us French types) in a 1:1 give the same results ?

I know I'll have to do a cereal mash, but at 50cents a kilo in bulk, corn grits can't be beat. Plus, as I said, I'll have someone to stir the pot for 60 minutes :D
 
I've read every post, and I think this will be the final:

Ingredients:
------------
Amt Name
3 lbs 8.0 oz Pale Malt (2 Row) US
3 lbs Pale Malt (6 Row) US
2 lbs Corn, Flaked
1 lbs Rice, Flaked
1.00 oz Willamette [5.50 %] - Boil 60.0 min
1.00 oz Crystal [3.50 %] - Boil 60.0 min
1.0 pkg Safale American (DCL/Fermentis #US-05)
1.10 tbsp PH 5.2 Stabilizer (Mash 60.0 mins
0.28 tsp Irish Moss (Boil 10.0 mins)
12.0 oz Sugar, Table (Sucrose) (1.0 SRM) Boil 15.0 min


Mash Schedule: Single Infusion, Light Body, No Mash Out
Total Grain Weight: 10 lbs 4.0 oz
 
With that much 6row I would boil the hell out of it ( as in 90+min) or it's gonna be a DMS bomb.
Unless you really dig the cooked corn thing
 
With that much 6row I would boil the hell out of it ( as in 90+min) or it's gonna be a DMS bomb.
Unless you really dig the cooked corn thing

I must have misread a few other posts. I added 6-row because I thought the extra enzymes would help convert the cereal adjuncts opposed to using all 2-row. It’s not too late for me to change back to 2-row. Thoughts?

My plan is 90 minute mash, 90 minute boil.
 
What a solid beer. Brewed this with my dad, and we both love it so far. I used the original recipe and cut it in half, but still used the full amount of minute rice, and 1 oz. of each hop. It tastes great!! Should I have used .5 oz. of each hop though to stay true to the original recipe since I made a 5 gallon batch??
 
Nemleu said:
I must have misread a few other posts. I added 6-row because I thought the extra enzymes would help convert the cereal adjuncts opposed to using all 2-row. It’s not too late for me to change back to 2-row. Thoughts?

My plan is 90 minute mash, 90 minute boil.

Nothing wrong with the 6 row... Just need to be aware of the increased potential of DMS. The 90 min at a good roll should be enough to flash it off.
I made an ale and added 2# of 6 row to the base malt and did a full boil on my stove top which will boil it, but it takes awhile. Did 60 min boil and did primary in a glass carboy. Because of the car oh I couldn't aerate as much as if I was fermenting in my primary and, viola' -DMS.
I did some research after the fact and eventually realized what happened. In something as clean as a cream ale I wouldn't take chances and stick the 90 min boil. It should be stellar! :mug:
 
Nothing wrong with the 6 row... Just need to be aware of the increased potential of DMS. The 90 min at a good roll should be enough to flash it off.
I made an ale and added 2# of 6 row to the base malt and did a full boil on my stove top which will boil it, but it takes awhile. Did 60 min boil and did primary in a glass carboy. Because of the car oh I couldn't aerate as much as if I was fermenting in my primary and, viola' -DMS.
I did some research after the fact and eventually realized what happened. In something as clean as a cream ale I wouldn't take chances and stick the 90 min boil. It should be stellar! :mug:

Your post gave me a reality check and I went back to the basics, only using 2-row. I plan on adding .75 lb. of sugar during the boil, 15 minutes. I made a yeast starter and there should be plenty of hungry cells to do the job. Cut my hops back too!
 
yep, in my experiences, cream ales are great bases to beers you're trying to flavor since they are so mild and somewhat neutral. Your "flavoring" tends to shine instead of getting swallowed up by the beer. I used a very similar base for my smoked jalapeno ale and it turned out wonderful! entering it in some regional comps this fall. The raspberry cream sound delicious, definitely a panty dropper!lol

That's good enough advice for me... let's see how this one turns out!

5383-raspberry-cream-ale.jpg
 
shadows69 said:
I think if ur are using 6 row u will be making Miller lite or something close anyway.

American lite lagers use predominately 6 row as their base malt because it has a clean flavor profile, more foam stability due to the protein and a high diastatic power which is useful in the liquification of cereal grains that need to be gelatinized and still transferred via pump as well as their conversion in the mash.
They have developed ways to deal with the by-products to maintain the flavor profile of their beers (whatever that may be). The examples I am thinking of are $$/equipment intensive and not practical to home brewers like us who haven't the time or the need to deal with decoctions and step mashes used to take full advantage of 6row malt as well as the increased potential for chill haze and boil compounds like SMM/ DMS
It's a good base malt for many reasons. Using it is far from "stooping" to a BMC type of brew.
 
I am out of US-05 and there is no LHBS near me. I have some dry S-04 yeast and some washed kolsch from 3 months ago. Can anyone suggest another good yeast to use for this? I would like to make a double batch this weekend.
 
From my personal experience, S-04 can substitute for S-05 but only if you keep the temps down real low in the 60s. Otherwise you get a taste I don't enjoy. But that is my personal taste, others enjoy S-04 better. Nottingham and S-05 are close to interchangeable for my preference at least, but YMMV.

This is assuming you want to keep to dry yeasts. The Kolsch may be interesting as an experiment.
 
I don't have a package in front of me, the low end of what is on the package iirc.

Just looked it up, 59F is the low end, I think 60-64F was what I would do.

But I'd use Notty if I had it.
 
Kegged this morning.

Seems the Saaz late aditions, and using cooked cornmeal to replace the flakes turned out fine. Warm, flat and green and it seems pretty good.

Thanks for the recipe - the light beer drinkers will be happy!

Brent
 
5 gal batch -
6# 2row
2# Flaked corn
1# Flaked rice

OG = 1.060
FG = 1.022

The gravity doesn't look right. It probably fermented a little warm around 72 - 74.
What could have happened? Was it my ferment temp? I actually only got about 4 gals because I didn't start with enough water.
My second batch was OG = 1.040. I will secondary tomorrow and take reading. Maybe this one will end up better. I wonder what a good reading should be at this point? I'm sure it fermented around the same temp.
 
Brewed up 5 gal of this recipe tonight (after brewing 5 gal of bitter this afternoon). I went with this recipe:

SG: 1.043
BU: 18,4

0,50 kg Grits (1,0 SRM) Adjunct 12,50 %
3,00 kg Pale Malt (2 Row) US (2,0 SRM) Grain 75,00 %
0,30 kg Rice, Flaked (1,0 SRM) Grain 7,50 %
25,00 gm Goldings, US [3,90 %] (60 min) Hops 15,3 IBU
10,00 gm Goldings, US [3,90 %] (30 min) Hops 3,1 IBU
0,20 kg Sugar, Table (Sucrose) (1,0 SRM) Sugar 5,00 %

I tried a little experiment. After reading on the gelatinization temperatures of the corn grits, I found that it was in the range of the sacch rest. So what did I do ? I skipped the cereal mash and just did a single rest @ 151F for 90 minutes.

Since I hit the OG right on the nose (and thus got complete conversion), I don't think a cereal mash is absolutely necessary for grits, provided you mash for a long enough time in the right range.
 
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