• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Sweet Stout Milk Stout

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

WildGingerBrewing

Supporting Member
HBT Supporter
Joined
Mar 15, 2010
Messages
17,572
Reaction score
2,614
Recipe Type
All Grain
Yeast
WLP -005 British Ale
Yeast Starter
1600 ml
Batch Size (Gallons)
5.5 gal
Original Gravity
1.060
Final Gravity
1.010
Boiling Time (Minutes)
90
IBU
25.2
Color
43.2
Primary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp)
3 weeks
Tasting Notes
Creamy, rich, thick, coffee, toffee
Efficiency: 80%
ABV: 6.55%
Calories: 200

8 lb Marris Otter
1 lb De-bittered Black Malt
12 oz Flaked Barley
12 oz Roasted Barley
8 oz Flaked Oats
8 oz Cara-pils
8 oz C-120
8 oz Rice Hulls

1 lb Lactose - added to boil

.75 oz Brewer's Gold - 10.5% AA @ 60 min
.5 oz Fuggles - 4.4% AA @ 30 min

This is the best stout I have ever made. Quite possibly the best beer I've ever made. I based the recipe on 70% efficiency and came out high but it was perfect. I will making this again in a week or two. Due to the high ABV, maybe it should be an Imperial Milk Stout.
 
That does look like a pretty darn good recipe. I happen to have all of the needed ingredients sans the Brewer's Gold hops. Might be worth a try.

Have you brewed the Left Hand Milk Stout clone from this forum? I've brewed it four times and will continue brewing it. Just wondering how they might compare.

https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f68/left-hand-milk-stout-clone-139820/
 
I have not. But Left Hand is what made me create this one. I like that beer, but wanted something "creamier". Let me know how you like it if you brew it.
 
I like Northern Brewer and would not have an issue sub ing. Just try to keep the IBU's close and it shouldnt make a huge difference. There isnt that many hops in this beer, afterall.
 
I like the low hop attitude of the recipe is why I decided to choose it, besides the fact it appears to be creamer than Left hand clone. Mash at 148-150? Lactose at the end maybe 15? Had stuck mash on last considering steeping oats by themselves and adding liquid back to boil. Thoughts?
 
I like the low hop attitude of the recipe is why I decided to choose it, besides the fact it appears to be creamer than Left hand clone. Mash at 148-150? Lactose at the end maybe 15? Had stuck mash on last considering steeping oats by themselves and adding liquid back to boil. Thoughts?


I like a higher mash for dark beers. Cant remember off the top of my head and am not near a computer, but 156 i think is my target. I add the lactose at the beginning of the boil. Enjoy!
 
I like the low hop attitude of the recipe is why I decided to choose it, besides the fact it appears to be creamer than Left hand clone. Mash at 148-150? Lactose at the end maybe 15? Had stuck mash on last considering steeping oats by themselves and adding liquid back to boil. Thoughts?

I always add lactose with 10 minutes left in the boil.

I was going to brew this soon, but I don't have any de-bittered black malt. Not sure if I'm going to be ordering any grain any time soon, either.
 
I brewed this today. OG 1066. Will pitch tonight probably. Made the starter on Saturday.

4 lb Maris Otter
8 oz de bittered black malt
6 oz flaked barley
6 oz roasted barley
4 oz flaked oats
4 oz cara pils
4 oz crystal 120
.5 lb Lactose (2 min)
11 g (.375 oz) Brewer's Gold (60 min)
7 g (.25 oz) Fuggles (30 min)
WYeast 1335 British Ale Yeast II
 
I tapped the keg last night and ended up drinking four pints of this tasty stout. Great recipe for sure! Very roasty, rich, and coffee like flavor. SWMBO liked it a lot as well. She said she likes it better than the Left Hand Milk Stout clone recipe from HBT which I have brewed at least four times. She asked me which type of coffee I added to it... :) Anyway, thanks for a great recipe. It's definitely worth brewing again. :mug:
 
I tapped the keg last night and ended up drinking four pints of this tasty stout. Great recipe for sure! Very roasty, rich, and coffee like flavor. SWMBO liked it a lot as well. She said she likes it better than the Left Hand Milk Stout clone recipe from HBT which I have brewed at least four times. She asked me which type of coffee I added to it... :) Anyway, thanks for a great recipe. It's definitely worth brewing again. :mug:
Thanks! Really glad everyone likes this one so much. I brewed it a few weeks ago and am aging it for the Sam Adams Longshot competition. Hope they like it as much as everyone here does!
 
Ginger and I constantly trade brews and while I haven't brewed it, he did send a couple of bottles my way this last time. This is a damn fine stout and I asked him to send more. :tank: I'll probably brew his recipe this fall.
 
Efficiency: 80%
ABV: 6.55%
Calories: 200

8 lb Marris Otter
1 lb De-bittered Black Malt
12 oz Flaked Barley
12 oz Roasted Barley
8 oz Flaked Oats
8 oz Cara-pils
8 oz C-120
8 oz Rice Hulls

1 lb Lactose - added to boil

.75 oz Brewer's Gold - 10.5% AA @ 60 min
.5 oz Fuggles - 4.4% AA @ 30 min

This is the best stout I have ever made. Quite possibly the best beer I've ever made. I based the recipe on 70% efficiency and came out high but it was perfect. I will making this again in a week or two. Due to the high ABV, maybe it should be an Imperial Milk Stout.

Thoughts on making an imperial version of this? Just add more MO?
 
I've never made an imperial stout. Sounds interesting. At first glance, I would say up all of the grains, keeping the percentages the same, or you would change the flavor. Right?
 
I would start off by just upping the MO. That's how I make some of my IPA's into IIPA's. You want to keep the IBU/Gravity ratio about the same, so you need to up the hops in step with the gravity.
 
I've never made an imperial stout. Sounds interesting. At first glance, I would say up all of the grains, keeping the percentages the same, or you would change the flavor. Right?

Yeah, seems logical to me. However, the research I've done on imperial recipes on this forum just seem to raise the main base malt and keep the other grains the same. I was trying to get some more opinions and find out if anyone had experience in the imperial area. It'll probably be later in the summer before I get around to an imperial version, but I do want to try one.
 
I vote to double the base malt, up the hop additions to an ouce each and up the c120 to a full #, or mash higher. Balance the sweet and the hops. My .02, but I'm still a rookie.
But, I've never made a beer under 7% and have made several over 10...
 
Thanks SnakeRidge and Jwin for the suggestions! That's what I was leaning towards doing judging from what little research I've done on imperial recipes thus far. I'll plug some numbers into Beersmith at some point and see what I come up with. Thanks, again.
 
I'm planning on brewing this during July 4th weekend. What temperature is everyone fermenting their wort? 65F? Have anyone ferment longer than 3 weeks? Will it help the beer by fermenting longer? How about secondary fermentation?

I'm planning on soak this with some Madagascar vanilla bean. Any suggestions?
 
I ferment around 68*. I have left it for several weeks in primary with no problems. I have never moved this beer to secondary. Even with the vanilla bean, I would do it in primary.
 
Back
Top