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

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

For what malt can I substitute Euro Pils for the base malt?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

msheraw

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 4, 2009
Messages
64
Reaction score
0
Location
Central PA
For example if I were normally using two row could I use Euro Pils. Obviously I could use it in a lager but what about ales? Maybe I am overcomplicating this.
 
I'd say you can substitute pilsen malt for 2-row pale ale malt in many styles if you really wanted to. Though I'm not sure why you'd want to. In general, it will result in a lighter colored beer and probably cleaner. On the other hand, you'll want to account for differences in extract potential, diastatic power, and boil 90 minutes instead of 60 in order to drive off DMS precursors.

If you're just looking for a style, I'd say a summer ale or wit.
 
Is the longer boil a necessity when brewing with any pilsner malt as the main base? What about a recipe that splits the base malts 50/50 (2 row/pils)?
 
Is the longer boil a necessity when brewing with any pilsner malt as the main base? What about a recipe that splits the base malts 50/50 (2 row/pils)?

Not if you are fermenting with ale yeast and normal ale temperatures and chilling your wort in a reasonable amount of time.

The relative lack of evolution of volatiles during fermentation is as much to blame for DMS in lagers as is the higher amount of SMM in pilsener malt.
 
pils and basic 2-row are very similar and interchangeable in a pinch.

You won't ruin a batch if you didn't have one but used the other.
 
I use CMC Euro Pils (assuming you are talking about the same malt) as my base malt for lager and saison. It is a pilsner malt with more character than 2-row or many domestic pilsner malts. It's like using something like Barke Pils.

You can absolutely use it in other beer styles, but I feel like some of the subtle biscuit and grassy notes might get lost in other beer styles.

And yes, I always boil beer with primarily Pils malt for 75-90 minutes to prevent DMS.
 
Back
Top