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London Cream Ale

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wstein

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Joined
Jun 28, 2006
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Location
Tampa, FL
Here is a recipe I found on brew-monkey.com for a cream ale. Brewed it up today and it is going to pack a wallop when it is through. Got a S.G of 1.073.


9# Pale LME
1oz Williamette (60 min)
1oz Fuggles (60 min)
.5oz Williamette (15 min)
1tsp Irish Moss (15 min)
.5oz Williamette (5 min)
8oz Malto-Dextrine (5 min)
1# Dextrose (flame out)

London Ale yeast (did a starter on Thur)

The est OG was 1.074, my measured OG was 1.073. The est. FG is suppose to be around 1.017. :drunk:

Can't wait for this one.
 
This sounds like it's right up my alley, however, did you mean lactose or dextrose at flame out?


I'm wondering where the "cream" is.

:)
 
Cream ale is kind of a wierd term since most of them dont use lactose . . . they use corn /shrug

http://www.bjcp.org/styles04/Category6.html#style6A
Ingredients: American ingredients most commonly used. A grain bill of six-row malt, or a combination of six-row and North American two-row, is common. Adjuncts can include up to 20% flaked maize in the mash, and up to 20% glucose or other sugars in the boil. Soft water preferred. Any variety of hops can be used for bittering and finishing.
 
Spyk'd said:
This sounds like it's right up my alley, however, did you mean lactose or dextrose at flame out?


I'm wondering where the "cream" is.

:)

The cream is the malto-dextrine

Dextrose is added at flame out.
 
So, you're adding corn sugar to it after 9 pounds of LME...

I guess the corn lends itself to the style and maybe it's just me, but malto dextrine seems like merely an additive and less an ingredient to me. I like to use CaraPils for body, which seems more natural.


I suppose I may have this all wrong as I like the overall recipe and idea behind it.



Oh, and I'm stuck on things like my "Cream Stout", which uses lactose sugar for the sweet and creaminess and is why I was on that track with this one. I'm putting a pound of it in my Pumpkin Pie Cream Ale.


Please keep us posted on this particular recipe!

:mug:
 

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