Bob
Well-Known Member
Well, I don't have a calibrated SRM set handy, so I can't give you definitive numbers. But the "porter" Chris & I brewed to Coppinger's recipe is much more of a brown ale than what we would consider a modern Porter, even Brown Porter. It's darker than Newcastle, but nowhere near black. So I guess is depends on your definition of "dark".
I don't think all malts were that brown. I'm also convinced they were all that light. If the palest malts were much lighter than 4-5L before the advent of the drum roaster, I'd be very much surprised. That's why I prefer Maris Otter or Mild Ale malt as the base malt in my historical beers.
Make sense?
Bob
I don't think all malts were that brown. I'm also convinced they were all that light. If the palest malts were much lighter than 4-5L before the advent of the drum roaster, I'd be very much surprised. That's why I prefer Maris Otter or Mild Ale malt as the base malt in my historical beers.
Make sense?
Bob