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Golden Porter problems

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Millsy

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Mar 20, 2015
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Woburn
So I brewed a porter and it has been fermenting for around 2 and a half weeks. I took a sample to check gravity and the color of the beer is golden like a ale. It is fermenting in a bucket so I was unable to see the color of it at all until now?

How is this possible
 
2 cans light malt extract
1/2 English crystal malt
1/2 chocolate malt
1/4 biscuit malt
1oz perle hop pellets
1oz tetnang hop
Burton water crystal
Irish moss
American ale yeast
 
That should have been enough Chocolate to, at least, make the beer brown. Who crushed your grain? When/how was it added?
 
Crush by the home brew store guy. I heated the water to a boil then took it off heat and steeped for 15 min. The recipe says 15 min but that seems kind of short now that I look at it.
 
Sounds like you didn't extract enough colour. The grist looks ok, a brown porter. I bet it will still taste good, maybe more like a British strong ale. Shouldn't be light gold unless something went wrong, though.
 
So is it best to always steep grains for 30 min or so. Or just stick with the recipes
 
Was the whole thing milled at once or separately? Maybe the chocolate malts weren't crushed? But 15 mins is quite short...
 
I assume those grain measurements are in pounds, right? It just says "1/2 chocolate malt."
 
Assuming 5 gallons and not knowing the crystal I went with c-40. I put the recipe in Beersmith and it is a light beer. 7.2 SRM. That is on the light end for an American Pale Ale.

You made beer. But it definitely does not classify as a Porter by any means. Unless you started a new style - Golden Porter. :D
 
Well I guess at the end of the day it will get the job done. Thanks for the info guys
 
the way i do it is to steep the specialty grains separately for the duration of the mash, which is usually 60 min and then add the tea to the boil. for extract brew i would steep for an hour at 150-ish.
 
Assuming 5 gallons and not knowing the crystal I went with c-40. I put the recipe in Beersmith and it is a light beer. 7.2 SRM. That is on the light end for an American Pale Ale.

You made beer. But it definitely does not classify as a Porter by any means. Unless you started a new style - Golden Porter. :D

Wait, how does a beer with 1/2 pound of chocolate malt get to be 7.2 SRM? That can't be right.
 
Assuming 5 gallons and not knowing the crystal I went with c-40. I put the recipe in Beersmith and it is a light beer. 7.2 SRM. That is on the light end for an American Pale Ale.

You made beer. But it definitely does not classify as a Porter by any means. Unless you started a new style - Golden Porter. :D

Wait, how does a beer with 1/2 pound of chocolate malt get to be 7.2 SRM? That can't be right.

OOPS!! I must have typo'd. I put the ingredients in BS again and get over 21 SRM
 
Like a few others have pointed out...I'd bet that your grains (especially the chocolate malt) wasn't crushed. I had a friend do this exact thing a few years back to a Porter.
 
Crush by the home brew store guy. I heated the water to a boil then took it off heat and steeped for 15 min. The recipe says 15 min but that seems kind of short now that I look at it.

That is short for steeping. Also, if you steeped right after you took it off heat from a boil, your water was probably still up around 200F. You should be steeping between 150-160F.

The color issue is odd though. I would have to guess it was the crush, or lack there of
 
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