drunkinThailand
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- Nov 12, 2015
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I would like to brew a belgian chocolate stout recipe I saw online, but would like to change it to partial mash.
I have limited choices of base malts as I live in Thailand. I could just use a pale 2-row malt, orI was wondering if using "CHÂTEAU 45-EBC ABBEY® Malt - Castle Malting" or "Weyermann - Abbey Malt".
Here is the recipe as is
6.6 lbs CBW® Pilsen Light LME
.75 lb Dark Chocolate Malt
.75 lb Caramel Malt 90L
.25 lb Roasted Barley
.25 lb Carapils® Malt
I am still a new brewer so want to keep to partial mash as opposed to all grain to make sure that even with a not so stellar efficiency I will have enough fermentables.
So I was thinking cut it down to 3 pounds of Muntons Light Dried Malt Extract and then using 6 pounds of grains, one of the two mentioned above.
I do partial mash BIAB in case that matters.
thanks for any advice
I have limited choices of base malts as I live in Thailand. I could just use a pale 2-row malt, orI was wondering if using "CHÂTEAU 45-EBC ABBEY® Malt - Castle Malting" or "Weyermann - Abbey Malt".
Here is the recipe as is
6.6 lbs CBW® Pilsen Light LME
.75 lb Dark Chocolate Malt
.75 lb Caramel Malt 90L
.25 lb Roasted Barley
.25 lb Carapils® Malt
I am still a new brewer so want to keep to partial mash as opposed to all grain to make sure that even with a not so stellar efficiency I will have enough fermentables.
So I was thinking cut it down to 3 pounds of Muntons Light Dried Malt Extract and then using 6 pounds of grains, one of the two mentioned above.
I do partial mash BIAB in case that matters.
thanks for any advice