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My stout is brown

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GutFunk

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Hey guys just looking for a little help here.

I do small batch BIAB all grain recipes and I made my second peanut butter stout. The first one turned out good just no head retention so I decided to add a bit of oats this time.

I subtracted some maris otter from the original recipe for the oats so not sure why but this time the beer has become brown whereas last time the brew was a nice dark brew.

This is the new recipe:


1 lbs 12.0 oz Pale Malt, Maris Otter (3.0 SRM) Grain 1 65.1 %
3.8 oz Oats, Flaked (1.0 SRM) Grain 2 8.9 %
3.2 oz Chocolate Malt (350.0 SRM) Grain 3 7.4 %
2.4 oz Caramel/Crystal Malt -120L (120.0 SRM) Grain 4 5.6 %
5.6 oz Milk Sugar (Lactose) (0.0 SRM) Sugar 5 13.0 %
0.15 oz Nugget [13.00 %] - Boil 60.0 min Hop 6 37.6 IBUs
74.00 g Reece Puffs (Boil 0.0 mins) Flavor 7 -
1.0 pkg SafBrew Ale (DCL/Fermentis #S-33) [23.66 ml] Yeast 8 -
1.00 Items Vanilla Bean (Secondary 10.0 days) Flavor 9 -
1.60 g Cocoa Nibs (Secondary 7.0 days) Flavor 10 -
6.50 oz PB2 Powder (Secondary 0.0 mins) Spice 11 -

Any help would be great

Cheers:mug:
 
1 gallon batch perhaps?

Plug it into Brewer's Friend, or any other brew calculator, and see what your SRM comes out to be. 7.4% of 350L Chocolate malt may not be quite enough color. Or maybe you didn't get the right kind this time or last time, hence the difference.

Most stouts include a small % of roasted barley or dehusked Carafa II or III to make it black. Or instead, use Black Prinz or Midnight Wheat. You need something with 600-800L.

If you haven't bottled it yet, you can boil up a small bit of the black potion and add to your bottling vessel.
 
No roasted barley puts it more into a brown or a porter type beer I would think.

Also oats are not associated with improving head retention, at least not as the primary reason for their inclusion in a recipe. They deliver a different type of mouthfeel often described as slick or creamy.

In a stout flaked barley and crystal malts are often use to augment head retention.
 
I have some concerns about brewing with the Reese's Puffs (preservatives?), but I would agree with the general idea in this thread. More chocolate malt or darker malts in your mix. For now, I say call it a porter and ride it out. I don't think the flavor profile will change too dramatically in making that cosmetic correction, so why bother?
 
If this was a 1 gallon recipe...and the final volume out of the kettle was 1 gallon total...this is coming in at/around 33 SRM...a mid-to-dark brown color, but not quite dark enough for a stout IMHO...pretty low OG too. I would increase the MO to 1.5 lbs. and the chocolate malt to 4 Oz...which would bringyour SRM to 37-38 and OG to @ 1.060.
 
Thanks for the repies. Yeah the recipe is 1 gallon. Beer smith said I should be at 35 SRM which is I guess why I was surprised when it came out so light compared to last time. I'll probably just let this one be and see how it tastes and chalk it up to learning.
 
Thanks for the repies. Yeah the recipe is 1 gallon. Beer smith said I should be at 35 SRM which is I guess why I was surprised when it came out so light compared to last time. I'll probably just let this one be and see how it tastes and chalk it up to learning.

I actually miscalculated because I didn't see the "12 Oz." after the 1 lb. of MO..so yes, it should have been 33.5 SRM. That case, I would have just upped the Chocolate Malt to 4 Oz.
 

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