master_haze
Active Member
Thanks!!
no problem ^_^ even though I am a rookie brewer that hasn't even brewed his first beer yet, I did do my studies.
master_haze
Thanks!!
Thank you. I should plan ahead better and be more creative with it but ended up with the stout and a black ipa. Had to use a little dme. Hope it all turns out tasty.1Mainebrew said:I've done a schwarzbier twice and a Belgian stout once when brewing second runnings from this beer. All came out amazing! If your gravity is light just boil longer before adding your first hop addition or toss in a little dme. You'll be fine.
ultravista said:Do you get a 5 gallon batch from the second runnings? I've got a imperial porter going this weekend with a target gravity of 1.088 @ 5.5 gallons. I should have enough grains for a second lower gravity brew. What do you suggest?
Thank you. I should plan ahead better and be more creative with it but ended up with the stout and a black ipa. Had to use a little dme. Hope it all turns out tasty.
Does anyone that has brewed this in the past know if it is an aggressive fermentation and consistently needs a blow off tube? I've never used this yeast or brewed this recipe before. Thanks.
Update on my batch:
Brewed = 12/14/12
Transfered to Secondary: 1/15/13
Added port soaked oak (soaked for 3 weeks in a cup): 03/03/13
kegged= 4/19/13QUOTE]
Tapped = 9/23/13
Wow, this is a great beer thanks for the recipe!The complex grain bill comes through in this amazing beer.
The Port wine leaves a distinct fruit flavor that left a few friends stumped, they could taste something fruity coming through but could not pick out what it was. The oak aging definitely adds a lot to the beer.
I recommend this beer with a nice mild/medium macanudo cigar :rockin:
Just wanted to chime in here. I brewed a version of this recipe (I say a "version" in the sense that I adjusted the figures for my system) without the oak back in September, bulk aged it for about two and a half months, and just put it in the keg last night. As I tasted it along the way, I really was enjoying the complex dark fruit flavors of this stout. However when I tasted it last night going into the keg, I definitely got some unpleasant astringency. I'm hoping it fades some as it carbs up and ages some more. I am planning to start sampling again in the new year and I will update further.
One thing I have learned over the past decade+ of homebrewing: it is very difficult to make a great imperial stout. I have high hopes for this one as it matures, though! Thanks for the recipe.
I only plan to keep it in secondary for 6-8 weeks, then bottle and let sit inside my house at ~74F for at least a month before opening one.