Hi!
Well... like some of you, I'm planning for the next brew, and this time, I want to go the route of the Belgian Stout.
Recipe Type: All Grain
Yeast: Safale Abbaye Yeast OR WLP550
Original Gravity: 1.068
Final Gravity: 1.011 with WLP550 - 1.012 with Safale Abaye (no data in Beersmith, as it's a new yeast. The .PDF mentionned 82% attenuation, and I entered 78 to 82 in my BS, for the sake of prudence
IBU: 25
Boiling Time (Minutes): 60
Color: 28,5 srm
Primary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp): 21 days @ 65
36.4 % Belgian Pilsner
27,3 % Munich Malt (Dark, 20 SRM)
18,2 % Wheat Malt (BE)
9,1 % Caramunich
9,1 % Special B
0.05 oz Horizon @ 60
0.10 oz Bramling Cross @ 20
0.10 oz EKG @ 20
MASH
60 minutes @ 152
10 minutes @ 168 (MO)
So... A few questions.
I'm not quite sure of the appropriate yeast. That stout is actually the 2nd "recipe" of the order -- the yeast, whether it's Safale Abbaye or WLP 550, was chosen mostly for the Belgian IPA I intend to brew. I'm not QUITE sure how ideal those two would be for a Stout though. I cannot see how it could be bad, but I can see how it would not be ideal. Anyhow, if somebody can suggest another yeast that would work for both, go ahead
The hops are mostly "leftovers" that I felt would work well. Horizon is obviously there only for bittering. I could probably do without, even if that could mean more BC and EKG, and something possibly not as smooth as Horizon in the end.
I might procure Kandi Sugar somehow - I just wonder if it's necessary at all with this all. Especially with the yeast possibly attenuating a 'lil more than what I'd want.
I do have some other malts on hand, but I just don't think they'll be THAT appropriate in this one (Victory, C40, Roasted Barley, Chocolate Malt). I mean, I guess I could add an ounce of roasted barley, but at some point, I'm already quite borderline as far as base malts/conversion is concerned. One thing though : it's a weeee bit pale for a stout.
I think that's all -- Flame away
Well... like some of you, I'm planning for the next brew, and this time, I want to go the route of the Belgian Stout.
Recipe Type: All Grain
Yeast: Safale Abbaye Yeast OR WLP550
Original Gravity: 1.068
Final Gravity: 1.011 with WLP550 - 1.012 with Safale Abaye (no data in Beersmith, as it's a new yeast. The .PDF mentionned 82% attenuation, and I entered 78 to 82 in my BS, for the sake of prudence
IBU: 25
Boiling Time (Minutes): 60
Color: 28,5 srm
Primary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp): 21 days @ 65
36.4 % Belgian Pilsner
27,3 % Munich Malt (Dark, 20 SRM)
18,2 % Wheat Malt (BE)
9,1 % Caramunich
9,1 % Special B
0.05 oz Horizon @ 60
0.10 oz Bramling Cross @ 20
0.10 oz EKG @ 20
MASH
60 minutes @ 152
10 minutes @ 168 (MO)
So... A few questions.
I'm not quite sure of the appropriate yeast. That stout is actually the 2nd "recipe" of the order -- the yeast, whether it's Safale Abbaye or WLP 550, was chosen mostly for the Belgian IPA I intend to brew. I'm not QUITE sure how ideal those two would be for a Stout though. I cannot see how it could be bad, but I can see how it would not be ideal. Anyhow, if somebody can suggest another yeast that would work for both, go ahead
The hops are mostly "leftovers" that I felt would work well. Horizon is obviously there only for bittering. I could probably do without, even if that could mean more BC and EKG, and something possibly not as smooth as Horizon in the end.
I might procure Kandi Sugar somehow - I just wonder if it's necessary at all with this all. Especially with the yeast possibly attenuating a 'lil more than what I'd want.
I do have some other malts on hand, but I just don't think they'll be THAT appropriate in this one (Victory, C40, Roasted Barley, Chocolate Malt). I mean, I guess I could add an ounce of roasted barley, but at some point, I'm already quite borderline as far as base malts/conversion is concerned. One thing though : it's a weeee bit pale for a stout.
I think that's all -- Flame away