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what is an oxymoron?lower-ABV British Strong
I kid and a good excuse to share a Barclay Perkin session imperial stout: Let's Brew Wednesday - 1921 Barclay Perkin IBS
what is an oxymoron?lower-ABV British Strong
Low-mid 6%, so lower end of the BJCP guidelineswhat is an oxymoron?![]()
Pleeeeaaaase could we all agree to leave out the bjcp entirely from this wonderful thread?Low-mid 6%, so lower end of the BJCP guidelines![]()
I am pretty sure they are illuminati space reptilians aswell.Pleeeeaaaase could we all agree to leave out the bjcp entirely from this wonderful thread?
Bjcp guidelines have no roots in British society. They want to overthrow the Queen. I heard they eat babys for breakfast. Their mother was a hamster and their father smelled of elderberries!
Maaaan you got me thirsty now.Time to brew your favorite most simple of all simple bitters. GP is such a pleasant base, very little if any crystal needed. A little light invert, a little maize or wheat. Paired with something floral like EKG or Mittlefrue.
Now I'm thirsty. Cheers to GP!
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So this one went a little...off-piste when I achieved nearly 85% mash efficiency and ended up nearly 10 points over my target OG...what is an oxymoron?![]()
I just experienced the opposite. I wanted to get 1.043, I got 1.04. so instead of 90% efficiency I got ... Something elseSo this one went a little...off-piste when I achieved nearly 85% mash efficiency and ended up nearly 10 points over my target OG...
I am about to order a new 25kg sack of basemalt, and thought to try Golden Promise instead of Maris Otter.
Looked around a little and my choices are either Simpsons or Fawcett, Fawcett are ~ 160 SEK(~16 Euro) more expensive but you know, floor malted.
Are the extra bucks for floor malted worth it since I brew mostly English styles where the malt character noticed more? The Fawcett is not THAT much more expensive so if it is a significant increase in quality/flavour it is IMO worth the little extra money, anyone who has any experience using Fawcett who could chime in?
Any reason why you've gone for Fog? IME it's basically LA III in terms of flavour profile, but a rubbish flocculator.Just started an all Chevallier ale with EKG and Willamette, using WLP066 London Fog. The grain was $$$$ so I'm curious to see how the finished product tastes.
Any reason why you've gone for Fog? IME it's basically LA III in terms of flavour profile, but a rubbish flocculator.
Might be my personal experiences but I really don't like it, even for the hazy IPAs it seems mostly used in.
Interested to see the recipe!
Be interested how you find Fog. I've used it twice and subsequently sworn off it because other than not flocculating it doesn't seem to do anything else it's designed to IME. Both times it crapped out low 20s and took what should have been unnecessary efforts to get back going. It didn't really add much to the flavour profile either.
You might want to plan to gelatine fine this one (or similar) in addition to the Whirlfloc but otherwise sounds like a great, easy drinking English style pale.
I'm also keen to see what you think of the Chevalier. It's not obscenely expensive here (in fact not really any more than your common-or-garden MO) so maybe something worth using in my next British brew.
I've just kegged my second English ale batch done with a Lallemand London/S-04 co-pitch (a British Strong) and it's definitely shaping up to be my favourite yeast combination for British ales. I rated it highly the first time I tried it but this is tasting bloody brilliant out of the fermenter, I can only imagine how much better it's going to be with a few week's conditioning time one it.
I watch him from time to time. Not tried any if his recipes though I did use one of his as a base for a Belgian Tripel.Anyone watch Apartment brewer? This looks like a good little Bitter recipe. Although I would like to try this with Nottingham yeast.
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Thanks for the reminder,I forgot about it!I watch him from time to time. Not tried any if his recipes though I did use one of his as a base for a Belgian Tripel.
Think I've mentioned it in thread before but my secret weapon when it comes to bitters (particularly best and strong) is ~5% Simpsons DRC. IMO it's the best British crystal out there (though I am fond of Crisp 100EBC extra light crystal in my British beers too), brings lovely toffee and dried fruit flavours without the slight astringency you can get from other higher EBC crystals.