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Imperial Stout Double-W Imperial Stout

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I know it's my recipe, and I am pretty proud of it ;)

However, if you can hit the OG and ferment to about 1.030, you will have a thick stout that is satisfying to the Imperial Stout fan, and there is plenty of sweet balance to the hops.

My additions of upping the IBU's to 110 and dry-hopping has produced a beer I will enter into the NHC next year. I'll keep this thread up to date. I have high hopes for the new version!
 
Has anyone given thought to some lactose? I like a slightly sweet stout and 1.5lb of black patent sounds like it is setting up for a more bitter stout. My favorite non-limited supply stout is Weyenbacher Tiny. It has a slight sweetness that sounds like it could match up with the velvety smoothness that is described here. Any thoughts from those that have already drank this one?

ug, I hated Tiny. i donno what it was. just not my thing. i love belgians. i love stouts. apparently, I do not love belgian stouts.

anyway, mine is about two weeks from being a year old. i had one about a week ago and it was fantastic.
 
Brewed this up today.

BIAB in my keggle pretty much filled her up! A lot harder to deal with than even my normal 16-18lbs IIPAs.

By some miracle, I hit right at 70%-- how the recipe was formulated, a bit lower than normal for me, but expected because of the grain bill. Stoked that I didn't have to add any of the DME I bought to hit the 1.124OG.

Did up the IBU to right at 100, using 1.5oz of Zeus 14% at 60 min, then left the other additions the same.

Did about a 100 min boil since I ended up with more pre-boil volume than wanted.

Pitched on a cake from Biermunchers Centennial Blonde of S-05 +1 more pack just because, and this thing is bubbling like mad through its blow off tube in LESS than 3 hrs!

Plan on letting it sit for a month in primary, and I did buy an ounce of oak chips that I'm thinking of oaking/bourbon for another month. Then plan on bottling this one in a combo of 12oz and 750ml Champagne bottles versus my normal kegging to allow easier aging.

My biggest and most challenging yet, so hopefully it will be worth it!
 
brewed this again today. did a parti-gyle like I did last year.

1.109ish and 1045ish.

i think I might take a gal of the imperial and put it on a bit of oak. not sure yet.
 
I oaked my last batch with some toasted white oak... wow!

It takes a bit of time to get the oakiness, but the vanilla from the oak is really nice. It's that complex oak-vanilla that vanilla beans and extracts just CANNOT produce.
 
I stuck a 1/2" thick, 1.5" wide, 10" long chunk of white oak in the keg for 2 weeks. I can taste the oak, but I do not like too much oakiness.

I took a torch to the oak to brown it - not burn. It lends more of a smooth note than a harsh, acrid woody note that way.
 
well, I just brewed this gigantor up.

All I can say about this brew day is holy crap.

It broke my mash tun - the 10 gallon cooler had the warping problem and this brew gave it a nice vertical crack. time to switch to keg mash tun.

The wort is so thick it coats my finger like tar - I had to boil for over 3 hours because i added too much sparge water. So my IBU's are around 130.

its aerating right now, i will pitch a huge starter and pray.
 
I need to post a pic of my hydrometer reading.
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Right there with you, Weird. Used some back up DME on Thursday due to poor efficiency. Used a little to much and ended at 1.125. Was afraid the two packs of 05 wouldn't be enough and threw in an extra packet of 04. May effect the flavor, but I figured it was better than a FG of 1.04.

Bourbon soaked oak are a'waiting.
 
I might end up pitching in another pack of yeast - I did make a massive starter though, think it will be enough? it was stepped up three times
 
So I pitched another packed of 05 that night, it has since stopped sounding like a machine gun. I'll give it its full time to clean up. when should I rack to secondary on this- two weeks?
 
I gave it 5 weeks on the primary cake, then put it in a keg at room temp for about 3 months although I would suggest much longer. My remaining 12 bottles keep getting better and its a shame I didnt bulk age the whole batch this long.
 
i gave it about 5 weeks as well in the primary, then about 8 months in the secondary. been bottled about 2-3 months now.
 
Looks like a nice imperial stout.

I question the rye, in a beer this big a half pound would go unnoticed.
 
It's like not this, or any other, recipe MUST include anything. Experiments are what led to this recipe in the first place.

I just am not sure how to answer other than to say that I do think the rye adds complexity. Any ingredient change here does change the taste.. For example, I find it hard to find Warrior all the time, so when I bitter with something else it is a slightly different beer.

As always, to each his own. However to brew THIS beer, you need the rye.:mug:
 
Thanks for the recipe! I'll be brewing this with some washed 1028 cake in a week or two. Quick question for you R2, what temp are you mashing at? I'm guessing 155-156 to get the full body but wanted to ask before I blew through 20# of Maris Otter. My plan (with your 8 mo age suggestion) is to brew next weekend and save it for this Fall. Thanks again!
 
Thought you'd be interested to hear some results - I entered this in a bjcp competition and got a 33 and 35, not too bad but didnt place. It was brewed 8 months ago and I got knocked a little for some esters which I attribute to fermenting during a heatwave without a fridge.

R2, I'd be happy to scan the full scoresheets to you if you are interested since its your recipe, let me know.
 
Rebrew to remove some of the esters and try again!

I have entered this in a couple of comps and have received a 40 average in one, and 42 in the other.

I don't do many comps much anymore, as tastes are so subjective. I have had an IPA average 42 in the first round, and then a 35 in the second (the rounds were 1 day apart). I now mostly judge on how quickly the keg gets drained at parties and get-togethers ;)
 
Most definitely I am rebrewing as soon as possible! I like entering to help make tweaks with my process.

Just wanted to say the recipe is great, people ask me to crack the few remaining bottles all the time.
 
I am glad you like it!

I have 3 recipes that I have to brew regularly: My IIPA (NHC second rounder), my British Porter (2 kegs are going to a Superbowl party), and this one.
 
Brewing right now! This is dark like a black hole! It's sucking the tastiness from every other beer in its tasty well!

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I really want to do a big beer, however with my biab setup there isn't a chance in hell I can mash 20+ lbs. I can do 14 at a stretch.

Is there any easy way to swap in some lme / dme for a chunk of that pale malt? Adapting recipes is still a little beyond my skillset, and I don't really want my first attempt to be something which I only find out I've screwed up after 4+ months in secondary ;)
 
A couple things I wanted to share for anyone else who is attempting this recipe.

a 10 gallon mash tun is the absolute MINIMUM you can get away with, and that's mashing 1-1.1 liters of water per pound of grain (usually I mash 1.5L/pound)

I boiled for 90 minutes and got the approximately 8.6 gallons of collected wort down to 6 gallons in the fermenter. I used 5 drops of Fercamp-S and it was the most energetic and least foamy boil I've ever had. Highly recommend it if you have a 42Qt kettle like me.

Hoping the Fermcap-S would make it from the boil to the fermenter I didn't add any more, and surprised myself with collecting 6 gallons, thought it'd be closer to 5.5. I'd purchased an 8 gallon wine fermentation bucket knowing my Fermcap might not have been in stock at the LHBS, but at the 12 hour mark when I went to add the Fermaid-K the krausen had completely filled the 2-gallon headspace (minus a half inch or so). Perhaps adding additional Fermcap-S to the fermenter would be a good idea next time?

This is also the first time I repitched yeast (~500 mL 1028 from a cake, 1 smack pack of fresh 1028 just in case) and used oxygen instead of stirring for aeration. I had steady airlock activity within an hour and today before popping the lid to add the Fermaid-K it was going off like a machine gun.

Just keep all that in mind when brewing this beer.
 
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