How does this brown ale recipe look?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Crisp call their Amber malt Biscuit.
Ive only ever used Amber from UK maltsters, and only used Biscuit from Dingemans. To me, they were nothing alike. I used biscuit in lots of beers and never needed to wait for it to smooth out. Anything i brewed with Amber malt required a good few weeks before drinking. Like Brown malt. I really like dark beers with Brown malt, but ill bottle them and wait a good few weeks before trying them

Only my experience, nothing more.
 
https://www.dingemansmout.be/malt/biscuit®-50 md

One suggests up to 5%, the other up to 30%.
Yeah, Crisp recommends their amber malt at up to 5%, while Simpson's recommends their amber malt at up to 20%. And then Dingemans there recommends up to 30%. Each maltster recommends a completely different amount.

https://www.simpsonsmalt.co.uk/our-malts/amber-malt/

EDIT: Personally Dingemans is the one I would like to use, and I'd like to use the amber/biscuit malt at around 10-15%, reducing the amount of Marris Otter to compensate, but currently Crisp's amber malt is the only malt of that kind available to me. I don't like how they recommend up to 5% (while Simpson's recommends up to 20% and Dingemans recommends up to 30%), but I don't really have any other options.
 
Last edited:
In the end, these were the specs I went with:

Fermentables:
2.4kg of Maris Otter malt (72.7%)
300g of Crystal 60L (9.1%)
100g of Crystal 150L (3%)
150g of amber malt (4.5%)
100g of chocolate malt (3%)
250g of maple syrup (7.6%) - Added 1 minute before end of boil (slowly to spoon)

Hops:
10 grams of Northern Brewer hops (pellet – 10.7% AA) for 60 minutes
10 grams of Fuggle hops (pellet – 5.0% AA) for 10 minutes

And the final results:
Starting Gravity: 1.056
Final Gravity: 1.011
ABV: 5.9%
(80% apparent attenuation)

The color is definitely on the dark end of a brown ale, but when you look at it in the beer line, it's a much lighter brown. And when you put it up to the light or let light shine through it, there's a very nice reddish amber color, likely from the chocolate and amber malt. I attached photos of the beer line, the beer on a table, and up to the light to show the color.

The flavor is very smooth and pleasant. It ended up drier than I originally planned, mainly because the maple syrup was mostly fermented, but it does have a nice sweetness to it. Not at all cloying or strong. It's mainly from the crystal malts, I believe (though starting the mash at 68C/154.4F likely contributed, though I only used a towel to insulate the kettle and did not turn the heat back on, so the heat of the mash had dropped to 66C/150.8F after 30 minutes and was at 65.3C/149.5F after 60 minutes). Since I only had 7.6% of the fermentables as maple syrup, it only added a light hint of maple character. The maltiness is definitely far more dominant. The hops lightly support the whole. Overall, I think it's a very well-balanced and pleasant beer, but it's only been 3 and a half weeks since I brewed it. I decided to go pretty light on the carbonation to stick to style (though the ABV ended up also getting higher than I intended).

I'll need more time with it, but overall I'm very pleased.
 

Attachments

  • brownale1.jpeg
    brownale1.jpeg
    1.7 MB
  • brownale2.jpeg
    brownale2.jpeg
    1.3 MB
  • brownale3.jpeg
    brownale3.jpeg
    1.1 MB
Last edited:
Back
Top