Gorgeous recipe, ain't a?
Thanks for this Yooper - i stumbled accross this thread and liked the sound of this receipe. After about 3 years of home brewing this is the best tasting beer that i have made. Its exactly what i was looking for - love the caramel maltiness and the mouthfeel. Do you have an Ameriacn IPA recipe of a similar high standing?
I am unable to get golden naked oats from the retailers here in Canada. What is my best option for substitution? Flaked oats? Oat malt? Leave it out completely? Any suggestions would be appreciated!
Thanks
I am unable to get golden naked oats from the retailers here in Canada. What is my best option for substitution? Flaked oats? Oat malt? Leave it out completely? Any suggestions would be appreciated!
Thanks
I was ready to make this beer this weekend, however I can't get hold of the naked oats in time (my LHBS has never heard of them) and given my track record of amber beers I'm going to have to pass. Thanks for sharing anyway!
Brewed this beer and like it. Was wanting to enter it in a competition but slightly confused as to what category. The closest match to me is a Red IPA, but wondering if anyone else has entered this.
It's really not bitter nor hoppy enough to be a red IPA. You could go with American Amber or pale ale, but it sort of straddles the line. If I was entering it in a BJCP competition, I'd probably go with American Amber since that is the category it is closest to.
What are folks' experience with the fermentation schedule for this beer? Looking at my brew schedule, I may not be able to get it off the yeast cake for 6 weeks. I can rearrange some of my brews and do it in 3 but that will put me behind on some other stuff.
Also - when does this drink best in your experience? How soon did you drink it after brewing it, and at what point do you think it hit its stride?
On my third batch of this beer but this is the first time with Denny's. What a difference. The mouthfeel and maltiness is so much better and pronounced. Gonna use it again this weekend on my pale ale to see what difference it makes to that recipe.