Yoop, (or anyone with pertinent knowledge on the subject)
I am going to be brewing this next week and was wondering about water profile.
I am planning to make it fairly balanced with .5 gram gypsum per gallon and .5 gram CaCl per gallon. This should put me at 66 calcium, 63 Cl, and 74 SO4 (all in ppm). Does this look like a solid water profile for this beer? I am using distilled water and adding just these salts and then acidifying with lactic acid if necessary. Just want to know what the ideal water profile would be for this brew.
It's one of my favorite recipes on this site! I have some iteration of it in my inventory always. I play with the hop additions with each batch. They're all delicious!!Found this thread a couple of years ago and added it to my list instantly but never got round to giving it a go. Gonna brew it this weekend, using the original grain bill and the cascade/summit hop schedule that someone posted. Just wanted to keep this mammoth thread going!
The link to the beersmith file doesn't seem to work anymore. Could you share it again please?
I see that you had considered increasing the amount of Munich malt in this recipe, and wondered if you had tried it. I have run across a farmhouse ale recipe that uses mostly Munich malt, and Hallertauer hops. I am not too experienced, but reading about the flavors one can get from Munich malt made me wonder if you or anyone had tried it. I can't find any other farmhouse ale recipes that use Munich malt as most of the grain bill. I want to try it, but may follow your recipe first. Thanks. I know this post is literally 14 years old, but was searching for a recipe.5 pounds pale malt (I used marris otter)
3 pounds vienna malt
2 pounds Munich malt
1/2 pound crystal 20L
1/2 pound crystal 60L
1 ounce Cascade 60 minutes
.75 ounce cascade 30 minutes
1 ounce Cascade 10 minutes
1/2 ounce cascade 5 minutes
1/2 ounce cascade flameout
1 ounce cascade (dryhop)
I used homegrown cascade for the late hopping additions, so had to guestimate the final IBUs, but used commercial pellet hops for the bittering additions (8% AAU).
Mashed at 154. Fermented at low ale temps (62) for two weeks, then dryhopped for a week.
This beer is my attempt at Lakefront Brewery's Cream City Pale Ale. I don't know if it's close- we don't have any to compare it to! But i was going for a slightly bitter, malt forward, APA. It worked! This beer is balanced, but definitely an APA. It's our new "house beer".
Edited to add new information: I don't use S05 much any more as it never clears well for me and can have "peachy notes" I no longer like. I love WLP001 for this beer, which is very similar but clears a bit better with no "peach" notes. I also mash at 152 with my new system, as I get better attenuation that way.
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I see that you had considered increasing the amount of Munich malt in this recipe, and wondered if you had tried it. I have run across a farmhouse ale recipe that uses mostly Munich malt, and Hallertauer hops. I am not too experienced, but reading about the flavors one can get from Munich malt made me wonder if you or anyone had tried it. I can't find any other farmhouse ale recipes that use Munich malt as most of the grain bill. I want to try it, but may follow your recipe first. Thanks. I know this post is literally 14 years old, but was searching for a recipe.
Thank you for the reply, that is very useful for me.No I decided that it was malty enough, and didn’t do it! Munich is very malty and very nice, but it’s a bit much in beers if overdone.