Yeast Farmer
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2021
- Messages
- 47
- Reaction score
- 65
Years ago when I made my first extract brew, it was a Brewer's Best cream ale kit. The brew shop guy threw in an extra ingredient that wasn't in the kit, some flaked corn and a grain bag. He said it would help the flavor, and told me to steep it, like any specialty grain for extract brewing. That was, at the time, some of my favorite beer that I had ever drank, and what I really liked about it was the sweet corniness from the flaked corn.
Early this summer when I did my first all-grain brew, I figured that it would be fitting to make that one a cream ale as well. I used two pounds of flaked corn in the mash, expecting that same sweet corny flavor from my extract cream ale. But, while it was still a good beer, I was disappointed on that score. When I thought about it, it was obvious. Mashing the corn meant that I might as well have just added some sugar. The flavor in the extract version came from the unmashed corny starch in the brew.
I'm thinking about brewing a Kentucky Common tomorrow. I think I'll limit the corn in the actual mash to half a pound, and then steep at least another half a pound in the kettle after the mash. I don't remember how much I used in the extract cream ale. Maybe a pound, but that seems like a lot.
Anyone tried this before? One difference with the all-grain version is that I'd be steeping the corn in wort instead of just water, prior to adding extract. Seems a little unorthodox, but I'll give it a go and see what happens.
Early this summer when I did my first all-grain brew, I figured that it would be fitting to make that one a cream ale as well. I used two pounds of flaked corn in the mash, expecting that same sweet corny flavor from my extract cream ale. But, while it was still a good beer, I was disappointed on that score. When I thought about it, it was obvious. Mashing the corn meant that I might as well have just added some sugar. The flavor in the extract version came from the unmashed corny starch in the brew.
I'm thinking about brewing a Kentucky Common tomorrow. I think I'll limit the corn in the actual mash to half a pound, and then steep at least another half a pound in the kettle after the mash. I don't remember how much I used in the extract cream ale. Maybe a pound, but that seems like a lot.
Anyone tried this before? One difference with the all-grain version is that I'd be steeping the corn in wort instead of just water, prior to adding extract. Seems a little unorthodox, but I'll give it a go and see what happens.