• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

American Amber Ale Fat Sam Amber Ale

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Brewed this today for a local brewfest next month. Came in at 1062 for 5.5 gallons in the fermentor...sample has a great biscuit flavor; looking forward to seeing how it tastes in a couple weeks!
 
Going to brew a modified version of this tomorrow. Cutting the Marris Otter to 8lbs which should bring down the gravity to ~1.050. Will be using 0.5oz Columbus FWH, a 1 ounce addition (0.5 oz of each hop) of Cascade and Willamette @ 20 minutes and the same dose at flameout. Fermenting with Wyeast American Ale II [WY1272] which has become my house yeast. Thinking about doing a 1oz dry hop of Willamette before bottling.

I'll post some pics in 5-6 weeks when the beer is ready to go. :mug:
 
Brewing went smooth, ended up hitting my gravity numbers spot on although only hit 151F for my mash. Here's the final recipe I ended up going with:

Recipe Type: All Grain
Yeast: Wyeast American Ale II (WY1272)
Yeast Starter: No
Batch Size (Gallons): 5.5 (targeting 5 gallons for primary)
Original Gravity: 1.050
Final Gravity: TBD (estimate 1.010, ~5.3% ABV)
IBU: 40
Boiling Time (Minutes): 60
Color: 11
Primary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp): 21 at 66F
Tasting Notes: TBD

Grains
------------
8 lbs Pale 2-Row (Breiss, 1.8L)
1 lbs Caramel 60 (Breiss, 60L)
1 lbs Biscuit (Dingemans, 24.5L)

Hops (pellet)
-------------
0.50 oz Columbus (FWH, 13.8% AA) [27.4 IBU]

0.50 oz Cascade (20 min, 6.8% AA) [8.2 IBU]
0.50 oz Willamette (20 min, 4.4% AA) [5.3 IBU]

0.50 oz Cascade (20 min 190F hopstand, 6.8% AA)
0.50 oz Willamette (20 min 190F hopstand, 4.4% AA)

Misc.
-------------
0.25 tsp Irish moss (20 min)
1.00 tsp Yeast nutrient (20 min)

Water Profile (ppm)
--------------
41 Ca2+, 116 So42-, 6 Mg2+, 55 K+, 50 Cl-

Mash
--------------
151F mash for 60 minutes. 2 168F batch sparges to yield ~7 gallons of wort to be boiled. 60 minute boil should yield ~5.5 gallons of wort, ~5 gallons will be transferred to the primary fermentation vessel.
 
Bottled this 3 weeks ago so thought I would update. This bottle had been sitting in the fridge for the last 3-4 days so it had a bit of time to setup.

2015-07-27%2014.49.27_zpss1capqpi.jpg


2015-07-27%2014.49.44_zpstn3midng.jpg


A> Slightly cloudy, lots of carbonation (I primed to 2.5 vol but didn't hit my volume so probably bumped it up to 2.6+), a nice burnt copper color with a slightly off white/khaki head. Very good head retention, very nice lacing.

S> Sweet, caramel from the malt. Subtle spicey esters from the yeast present in the aroma (had a lot of trouble controlling ferm temps when I went out of town), and a bit of earthy citrus from the hops on the backend.

T> Malt comes through much like the aroma, a sweet caramel with a bit of "burnt" flavor that comes through on the tongue. Hops take a more aggressive role in the flavor, punching through the sweetness with flavors resembling grapefruit with hints of earth, dankness, and spice. The malt comes through again on the backend, perhaps with a bit of ester from the yeast as well.

M> Mouthfeel is a bit thin, a bit too carbonated had to give a few minutes for the head to calm down. Very drinkable beer.

O> This turned out to be a very nice amber ale. The beer turned out to be very approachable despite my trouble controlling fermentation temperatures when I had to go out of town. Overall it was a very nice beer that I will be brewing again. On my next batch I'm going to try the following:

*Going to use a clean yeast at the low end to prevent yeast esters
*Use better clarification methods to further prevent yeast esters (probably cold crash + gelatin)
*Dryhop to further highlight the hops
 
I plan on brewing this soon but 10lbs of pale malt seems a recipe to overshoot OG. Will have to mess with the numbers.
 
Been in the keg a little over a week. What a great balanced amber this is! This will definitely be on the repeat list.

Thanks for the recipe Yooper!

GqYU25c.jpg
 
I've made this recipe a handful of times now and it is a go-to easy drinking beer for parties and such. I bought ingredients for a 10gal batch back in January with the intent of taking 5gal to a festival and keeping 5gal for the kegerator. Before I got a chance to brew something came up that would prevent us from attending the festival, so I decided to save some space (and a keg) and make a barleywine instead. I used exactly twice the ingredients for a 5.5gal batch, and it has turned out surprisingly good. It is rich and smooth, with caramel in the aroma and flavor. I think it is borderline between and American and English Barleywine, with a little more bitterness than I would expect in an English but not the strong hop flavors to make it an American. I filled a 3gal keg and put the rest in 750ml bottles. I've only taken a gallon or so out of the keg so far; I expect I'll start dipping in to it a little more as the weather cools and let the bottles sit for a while.

Big Fat Sam
American Barleywine (22 C)


Recipe Type: All Grain
Yeast: WLP001
Yeast Starter: Yes- 381B cells
Batch Size (Gallons): 5.5gal
Original Gravity: 1.103
Final Gravity: 1.020
IBU: 66
Boiling Time (Minutes): 90
Color: 21
 
Since we're inadvertently resurrecting this thread, has anyone tried this recipe with maybe a pound of Munich added as well, for a little more malt backbone? I read somewhere that there are few beer recipes that would not benefit from a pound of Munich, and I've found that to be the case in my own brewing. I may brew a batch with and a batch without to see how they compare.
 
Pulled the first pint of "Sam's Tire" tonight. It's based on @Yooper's recipe above, but with a pound of Munich. Oh, man; this is a fantastic beer. It's well-balanced, but with a nice bready backbone. I'll definitely be brewing it again!
 
This one inspired me today to brew an american amber ale. I did not know what to brew and I had this new dry yeast that I wanted to check out (Angel B 36) and wooobdeeewooop there it was. I also had some ingredients that I recently bought and never tried and they fitted just perfectly in with this one. The result is

10% Chit malt (that is a new one to me)
10% Black Swaen honey biscuit (a new one to me as well)
10% crisp english crystal (77 L)
Rest MO pale ale

OG about 1.054

about 30 Ibus with chinook and vic secret @ 30 minutes

will get about 4g/l hops devided into vic secret and cashmere (both new to me)

Everything went smooth, I added a bit of vitamin C to the mash, let's see if we can make the dreaded almond stay at home this time :D

There is the full recipe:
https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/view/1229589/american-amber
 
Last edited:
So, quick update on Fat Sam with a pound of Munich. It's a really good beer (that I'm all out of). I entered in a couple of competitions, and it's done pretty well. It's scored a 31 (Bluff City Extravaganza) and a 32 (All American Homebrew Competition; 3rd place) in the American amber category.

On a lark, I also entered it in the All American Homebrew Competition as an Irish red, and it scored a 37.5 and earned a 2nd place medal (beating out my Irish stout)! 🤣
 
Yes I am going to make my own recipe similar to this one. I like the idea of using double the amount of grains that a beginner user should use (to gain experience) since in theory you reduce the electric kettle heating costs involve and therefore save money (provided you don't fail the batch).

My only issue with doubling all the ingredients is my current single-strength beer is with 2 oz 6.1% AA Goldings @ 60 min and no aromatic hops.

I think if I double the ingredients of everything, I am going to need to change the recipe to 2oz @ 60 min and 2 oz at 10 min or I could overshoot the IBU and end up with something that tastes too bitter.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top