I just put down a first runnings imperial stout, and I'm planning on adding oak chips, whiskey, and vanilla beans in secondary (5 gallon carboy filled to the top). It will age for a year or so before becoming a regular drinker.
Recipe:
9kg Vienna,
500g Carabohemian (between CaraMunich III and CaraAroma)
700g Roasted Barley
500g Chocolate Malt
1kg oats
800g brown wheat malt (~90L, tossed in because it's been sitting - vacuum sealed - in my grain bin for a few years and this is probably the best chance to get rid of it)
Mashed at 69C
2 hour boil
22.5p/1.095 OG
~80-100 IBUs first-wort Calypso and no other hops
Fermenting around 17C with two packs of Nottingham.
I've got 70g medium toast American oak chips, five 10-13cm Madagascar vanilla beans (a bit runty), and a bottle of Jim Beam Rye whiskey. I plan on toasting most of the oak a bit in the oven and removing a bit at a time to achieve a variable toast level that should be more complex than just using regular oak chips, but other than that I'm looking for suggestions. How much whiskey, how much oak, how much vanilla, and how much time on the vanilla and whiskey should I go for in a beer that's gonna age another year or more? Right now I'm thinking 250ml whiskey, 50g oak, 3 vanilla beans (equivalent to 1.5-2 bigger beans), and 2 months in secondary (after soaking the oak and vanilla in the whiskey for a few weeks). How's that look? Will it mellow out too much before a year of aging? Too strong? Just right? I could use advice from anyone more experienced than me with whiskey, oak, and vanilla in beer, especially big imperial stouts like this one.
Recipe:
9kg Vienna,
500g Carabohemian (between CaraMunich III and CaraAroma)
700g Roasted Barley
500g Chocolate Malt
1kg oats
800g brown wheat malt (~90L, tossed in because it's been sitting - vacuum sealed - in my grain bin for a few years and this is probably the best chance to get rid of it)
Mashed at 69C
2 hour boil
22.5p/1.095 OG
~80-100 IBUs first-wort Calypso and no other hops
Fermenting around 17C with two packs of Nottingham.
I've got 70g medium toast American oak chips, five 10-13cm Madagascar vanilla beans (a bit runty), and a bottle of Jim Beam Rye whiskey. I plan on toasting most of the oak a bit in the oven and removing a bit at a time to achieve a variable toast level that should be more complex than just using regular oak chips, but other than that I'm looking for suggestions. How much whiskey, how much oak, how much vanilla, and how much time on the vanilla and whiskey should I go for in a beer that's gonna age another year or more? Right now I'm thinking 250ml whiskey, 50g oak, 3 vanilla beans (equivalent to 1.5-2 bigger beans), and 2 months in secondary (after soaking the oak and vanilla in the whiskey for a few weeks). How's that look? Will it mellow out too much before a year of aging? Too strong? Just right? I could use advice from anyone more experienced than me with whiskey, oak, and vanilla in beer, especially big imperial stouts like this one.