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Pumpkin beers: Discussion, developing recipes, tips tricks, and a good practices

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I was expecting 1.054 based on the grain bill. I added 58 oz. of canned pumpkin but still got 1.054. It did add a nice orange color though. Sweet potato might be a nice alternative.

Sweet potato might be no better. Ugh. I'll probably just pitch the pumpkin into the mash so I don't feel slimey when I call it a pumpkin beer. I'll probably bake the pumpkin.
 
I was expecting 1.054 based on the grain bill. I added 58 oz. of canned pumpkin but still got 1.054. It did add a nice orange color though. Sweet potato might be a nice alternative.

Same exact thing happened to me. I was expecting some boost to the gravity, not much, but some.

Would sweet potato do much different than pumpkin though?
 
I was expecting 1.054 based on the grain bill. I added 58 oz. of canned pumpkin but still got 1.054. It did add a nice orange color though. Sweet potato might be a nice alternative.

Ditto. I got seemingly zero gravity points from 2lbs of Pumpkin.

I certainly don't think it makes 'no difference'. But we would need a side by side comparison, and I don't plan on making another until next year.

I think I've gotten some colour from it and some mouthfeel. It's not done yet though.

However, I am not sure sweet potato would do much more?
 
Here's my overly-complex Imperial Pumpkin Ale I hope to brew soon. I know there is too much in there. I'll probably chop out the maple extract. I'll probably also reduce the spices, make a tea of them with a little vodka, and add at bottling. I usually add all the possible ingredients, then simplify it just before brewday.

It's 9.5% ABV.

Recipe Specifications
--------------------------
Batch Size: 5.00 gal
Boil Size: 6.27 gal
Estimated OG: 1.097 SG
Estimated Color: 18.4 SRM
Estimated IBU: 15.7 IBU
Brewhouse Efficiency: 70.00 %
Boil Time: 60 Minutes

Ingredients:
------------
Amount Item Type % or IBU
1.50 lb SB Rice Hulls - 50# (1.8 SRM) Adjunct 7.32 %
8.00 lb Pale Malt (2 Row) US (2.0 SRM) Grain 39.02 %
4.00 lb SB White Wheat Malt (2.5 SRM) Grain 19.51 %
3.00 lb SB Munich Malt - 10L (10.0 SRM) Grain 14.63 %
2.00 lb SB Caramel/Crystal Malt - 40L (40.0 SRM) Grain 9.76 %
1.00 lb SB Melanoiden Malt (28.0 SRM) Grain 4.88 %
1.00 lb SB Victory Malt (28.0 SRM) Grain 4.88 %
0.50 oz Williamette [4.80 %] (90 min) Hops 6.4 IBU
1.00 oz Williamette [4.80 %] (30 min) Hops 9.3 IBU
2.00 oz Allspice (Boil 5.0 min) Misc
2.00 oz Clove Spice (powder) (Boil 5.0 min) Misc
2.00 oz Nutmeg (Boil 5.0 min) Misc
3.00 oz Maple Extract (Boil 5.0 min) Misc
3.50 lb Pumpkin Fruit (Mash 60.0 min) Misc
4.00 oz Cinnamon Spice (powder) (Boil 10.0 min) Misc
1 Pkgs Scottish Ale (Wyeast Labs #1728) [Starter Yeast-Ale


Total Grain Weight: 20.50 lb
----------------------------
 
Here's my overly-complex Imperial Pumpkin Ale I hope to brew soon. I know there is too much in there. I'll probably chop out the maple extract. I'll probably also reduce the spices, make a tea of them with a little vodka, and add at bottling. I usually add all the possible ingredients, then simplify it just before brewday.

It's 9.5% ABV.

Recipe Specifications
--------------------------
Batch Size: 5.00 gal
Boil Size: 6.27 gal
Estimated OG: 1.097 SG
Estimated Color: 18.4 SRM
Estimated IBU: 15.7 IBU
Brewhouse Efficiency: 70.00 %
Boil Time: 60 Minutes

Ingredients:
------------
Amount Item Type % or IBU
1.50 lb SB Rice Hulls - 50# (1.8 SRM) Adjunct 7.32 %
8.00 lb Pale Malt (2 Row) US (2.0 SRM) Grain 39.02 %
4.00 lb SB White Wheat Malt (2.5 SRM) Grain 19.51 %
3.00 lb SB Munich Malt - 10L (10.0 SRM) Grain 14.63 %
2.00 lb SB Caramel/Crystal Malt - 40L (40.0 SRM) Grain 9.76 %
1.00 lb SB Melanoiden Malt (28.0 SRM) Grain 4.88 %
1.00 lb SB Victory Malt (28.0 SRM) Grain 4.88 %
0.50 oz Williamette [4.80 %] (90 min) Hops 6.4 IBU
1.00 oz Williamette [4.80 %] (30 min) Hops 9.3 IBU
2.00 oz Allspice (Boil 5.0 min) Misc
2.00 oz Clove Spice (powder) (Boil 5.0 min) Misc
2.00 oz Nutmeg (Boil 5.0 min) Misc
3.00 oz Maple Extract (Boil 5.0 min) Misc
3.50 lb Pumpkin Fruit (Mash 60.0 min) Misc
4.00 oz Cinnamon Spice (powder) (Boil 10.0 min) Misc
1 Pkgs Scottish Ale (Wyeast Labs #1728) [Starter Yeast-Ale


Total Grain Weight: 20.50 lb
----------------------------



Sounds great.

I don't mean to discourage you, but I don't imagine this will be quite ready by halloween or even thanksgiving this year. It's a pretty big beer, with lots going on!

Still brew it though!
 
Sounds great.

I don't mean to discourage you, but I don't imagine this will be quite ready by halloween or even thanksgiving this year. It's a pretty big beer, with lots going on!

Still brew it though!

Right on. I am hoping to have it for Christmas. I have a lot of family coming down to the warmer south. I also have a crazy blueberry wheat I will make at the same time. Funny thing, I don't much like the fruity beers, but 'tis the season!
 
Ok, I brewed Yuri's Thunderstruck Pumpkin Ale last year and it i liked it.

I brewed it identical to his specifications except for the "spice tea" added to the secondary or at bottling.

My goal this year for a pumpkin ale is to acheive a good spice flavor AND aroma.

My only concern is how much? which probably depends on the size of the base beer.

How beneficial or irrelevant do you guys think it would be to create 6 or 8 different "blends" of pumpkin pie spices steeped in water to sample before brewing? Your obviously not going to have the base beer flavor there so would it be useless?

Right now im thinking off adding pumpkin pie spice around the 30 min. mark, flame-out, and secondary.

As far as color goes, i want to achieve the Dogfish Head Punkin beer color; a nice clear, light-bronze orange color.

I've heard that munich and vienna grains give you that orange. Should i sub the 2-row in Yuri's recipe for munich or vienna?

Btw, I plan on brewing 2 separate batches of this recipe on with and one without pumpkin! :ban:
 
Btw, I plan on brewing 2 separate batches of this recipe one with and one without pumpkin! :ban:

Wow, now THAT is great. I wish you had done this a few months ago, cause I will be brewing mine before you get done with yours. I am really curious about the usefulness of the pumpkin. Please please please close the loop and post your results here.
 
Will do. I guess i'm a skeptic when it comes to "significant contributions" from a pumpkin other than color (my main concern). I believe the spice is what makes it pumpkin pie. Heck, trying baking 2 pumpkin pies: 1 with spices, one without and let me know the taste differences :D
 
Aw c'mon. ;) Even if you find that the pumpkin contributes zero flavor, texture, mouthfeel, color, etc. you HAVE to put pumpkin in a pumpkin ale. Don't you?

Otherwise we're no better than Miller Lite saying that they put hops in three times. :p
 
Aw c'mon. ;) Even if you find that the pumpkin contributes zero flavor, texture, mouthfeel, color, etc. you HAVE to put pumpkin in a pumpkin ale. Don't you?

Otherwise we're no better than Miller Lite saying that they put hops in three times. :p

Eh. if its less hassle and mess yet produces a superior product, why not?

That could be the gimmick: Pumpkin flavored beer without pumpkin!


Side-note: Some people brew a peach beer with apricots and vice versa.

MEGA EDIT!

It looks like somebody beat me to it. Here is an excerpt from "The Wort Hog Beer Blog:"

Mr. Wort Hog said:
We made a pumpkin ale a few years back; roasted the pumpkin & added it to the boil, fermented the beer and realized... in beer, pumpkin pretty much tastes like a whole lot of nothing. These beers really ought to be called pumpkin pie ales, since the characteristic flavor is the spices, not the squash. A related note to the home brewer: if making a pumpkin beer, skip the pumpkin and just go for the spices. You'll save yourself a lot of work.

The rest of the blog: The Wort Hog Blog
I will still proceed with my experimentation :drunk:
 
Has anybody seen this?!?!? This guy is down-right insane!!!

Pumpkin Mash Tun & Fermenter



I think that is absolutely amazing.....I would love to know how the beer turned out....no reason why it wouldnt work I guess...as long as you kept fermentation temp pretty low so the pumpkin dodnt mold out on you...make it a lager and I think its in there!!!
 
I kegged my pumpkin ale tonight. I had about half gallon left in the better bottle that didn't fit in the keg, so I'm drinking it warm and flat. Not bad, it def tastes like pumpkin pie. I think it will be much better cold and carbed, but so far it's about what I was looking for. I don't plan on tapping it for a couple more weeks though, so the real review has to wait til I float one of the other kegs.
 
Hello, I'm new here and am impressed with all of the info you all share!
I've just begun brewing and am already working on my 2nd beer. I'm a little worried
about my pumpkin ale because it isn't fermenting yet. Its been about 2hrs and ive yet to hear any gurgling from the airlock. The temp on my primary bucket is reading 78 degrees so i think I may have dumped my wort into the fermenter too quickly. Can anyone here tell me if I'm going to be alright and it will eventually start fermenting?
Thx.
 
Hello, I'm new here and am impressed with all of the info you all share!
I've just begun brewing and am already working on my 2nd beer. I'm a little worried
about my pumpkin ale because it isn't fermenting yet. Its been about 2hrs and ive yet to hear any gurgling from the airlock. The temp on my primary bucket is reading 78 degrees so i think I may have dumped my wort into the fermenter too quickly. Can anyone here tell me if I'm going to be alright and it will eventually start fermenting?
Thx.

Fermentation can take 24 to 72 hrs to show visible signs

Also, if you are fermenting in a bucket make sure the lid is on tight. Fermenting at 78F will give you a lot of esters, i ferment a majority of my ales between 60F-68F.
 
Up at 630am and the pumpkin ale is fermenting like mad!
ThanKs for the speedy replies.

Can anyone clarify how long I'll need in the secondary and
I'm loving this, can't wait to start on another one!

Btw, my first batch I made was on my electric stove. Way too slow.
So I cleaned out my gas fireplace and brewed the pumpkin in it, worked out
wonderfully.
 
If you didn't use pumpkin in it, you could probably skip the secondary and just primary for 2 weeks. (I'd go an extra week if the OG was over 1.060).

If there was pumpkin in there, I'd primary for 1 then secondary for 2, then bottle for at least 3. Most who have done pumpkin before claim that a couple of months in bottle helps for the spices to mellow and meld with the rest of the brew. I brewed mine 5 days ago.
 
So here's what I'm coming up with so far:

OG (1.053 before pumpkin, ? after)
IBU 25
SRM 12

7 lbs. Golden Promise
1 lb. British Crystal 34L
1 lb. Torrified wheat
1 lb. Home Toasted Maris Otter
0.5 lb. Molasses
(2) 29 oz. cans of pumpkin (added to mash)
1 t. cinnamon (5 min)
1/2 t. allspice (5min)
1/4 t. nutmeg (5 min)
1/4 t. clove (5 min)
1 oz. fresh grated ginger (5 min)

0.57 oz. Magnum whole leaf hops (90 min)

Denny's Favorite 50 yeast (supposed to be rich and velvety, perfect for a pumpkin ale)

I'm hoping I get enough sugar out of the pumpkin to get 1.060 OG. If it ferments down to 1.014, that should hit 6%ABV on the nose. Does anyone know what contribution pumpkin has to the OG?

Oh snap! This beer's number was up and got kegged tonight. FV was 1.012 and it's awesome! The spice is noticeable but subtle enough that it won't be overpowering, even after multiple pints. The pumpkin comes through more as an unctous mouthfeel than flavor, though if I concentrate, I can pick out the pumpkin. The golden promise really adds a nice maltiness. The molasses is barely detectable, I might have to add a bit more next time, I'll know better once it's carbed and chilled. Overall, I'm very happy with how it came out. I'll post the final recipe at that time if it meets my expectations.
 
Mine finished at 1.012 as well.

Tasted pretty good but a little hollow. I felt that a touch of sweetness added to the finish was called for so I did something I never do. I backsweetened with 4 oz of lactose and 2 oz of brown sugar. It turned out perfect. Just went officially on tap last night.
 
Mine finished at 1.012 as well.

Tasted pretty good but a little hollow. I felt that a touch of sweetness added to the finish was called for so I did something I never do. I backsweetened with 4 oz of lactose and 2 oz of brown sugar. It turned out perfect. Just went officially on tap last night.

Yeah, I was aiming for this one to dry out pretty good and 1.012 is about the perfect balance. I find pumpkin beers that are either too sweet or have too much spice can be hard to enjoy after a pint or in some cases, half a pint. My aim for this one was to be completely sessionable and I think it will fit the bill. I do see how if the aim is for something that closely approximates pumpkin pie or something, a little more sweetness would be beneficial. I think this Denny's fav 50 yeast I used helped to add some body so that even though it's balanced on the dry side, it isn't thin or crisp.
 
I find pumpkin beers that are either too sweet or have too much spice can be hard to enjoy after a pint or in some cases, half a pint.

I agree and expect mine to be this way. OK with me though. I'm really not a flavored beer guy so I made this for the parents walking with their kids on Halloween night who might want a cup. Though next year I expect I'll boost this with more crystal instead of backsweetening.

Come to think of it I might simply have been tasting a little too much spice before which put it out of balance. So it needed some sweetnes to balance it out.
 
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