Lefou
Danged rascally furt
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So, Miraculix ... give us some idea how your version of thick mash "beer bread" ale or keptinis finished up!
So, Miraculix ... give us some idea how your version of thick mash "beer bread" ale or keptinis finished up!
Yes, I would say 25 to 30 ibus would be the sweet spot, as it finishes a bit sweeter than your would expect from the yeast, so better choose one of the higher attenuating lager yeasts. The one i used would be the easiest one, as it really does well at room temp.Well, from that description this is something that might be an experiment for Chimay yeast. I expected the flavors you described and think 20-25 IBU of noble hops would be interesting to do, and it might end up sort of like a weaker dubbel or holiday ale as such.
Thanks!
Of course you can, but as you have not a single idea about how this process affects the taste, you would fly blindly.I don't see why you couldn't brew a keptinis-influenced beer with a more expressive yeast but I agree you do not need to. It is a flavorful and complex beer without help. I brewed a keptinis-inspired beer myself and used London Ale III to ferment (because it was the most appropriate yeast I had on hand) and it turned out really nice. Definitely a messy process though.
I can really see this one as a nutbrown winning competitions. But you have to figure out when the darkness from the baking is correct to get into nutbrown terrain.I think the idea of using a nicely flocculating, attenuative ale or lager yeast with few esters or phenolics is a good suggestion. That style of brewing may allow a better appreciation of the flavors before possibly muddling things up with other impressions.
Either way, I still like the idea of a caramelized, baked mash that would throw a spin on a brown ale or porter styled beer that has a very simple grain bill.
Love the viewpoints and opinions, thanks!