Just something I have noticed in the last few weeks being repeated. Recipes without Crystal malts. I only started brewing last year, but I remember seeing Crystal in most if the recipes I found. Is this a thing?
Just something I have noticed in the last few weeks being repeated. Recipes without Crystal malts. I only started brewing last year, but I remember seeing Crystal in most if the recipes I found. Is this a thing?
I see thread after thread after thread on here that leads with "My beer is too sweet" and I look at the recipe and there is a pound or more of crystal malt in it.
I use C120 and Special B as my base malts.
I've never had a problem with sweetness left behind by crystal malt. I've had astringency issues, but never sweetness issues. The sugars produced are pretty fermentable, especially if used as part of a mash with a high enough diastatic power. The biggest problem I've had related to sweetness is underhopping.
Over the years, I've reached the conclusion that crystal malts are the most unnecessarily used malts. I keep my usage under 8oz for 5 gallons unless I want to keep it sweet.
I see thread after thread after thread on here that leads with "My beer is too sweet" and I look at the recipe and there is a pound or more of crystal malt in it.
Don't get me wrong. Crystal malts have their time and place. But unless you specifically want to taste the sweetness they leave behind, you should use just enough to get your desired SRM and not any more.
I use C120 and Special B as my base malts.
I may make a Doppel Bock with that name now.Billy's Sessionable CaraKlubb
a good number of us didn't color inside the lines when we were teenagers.Unless I am brewing a Saison or dry stout,I use a minimum of 5% crystal of some sort. English styles get 10% and the same amount of sugar(balance?).
Hate CaraHell,even 5% of the grain bill can make it too sweet.
Trends are for trend followers. Trend followers are sheep/ever-teenagers
It's not fermentability vs unfermentability. Crystal malts impart a sweet flavor.
I believe someone posted awhile back that Red X is a mix of Munich and Melanioden malts. I used it 100% once in a 1.050 lager and it turned out a really nice malty red colored lager.