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Red Ale turned out tofee-ey - input?

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mrkeeg

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Mar 4, 2005
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I'm generally more partial to big, flavourful (especially hoppy) beers, but I've been trying to create a few more bland ones for my friends. I thought I'd try a low-hopped, easy drinking red ale - something maybe kind of like a "Rickard's Red" (but tastier!)

Anyway, I came up with this recipe, and the colour came out nicely, it's smooth and hops are almost non-existent (as desired) but there is a big 'candy - toffee' flavour and aroma that I really don't want. (And I don't mean "a slight toffee note" ... I mean "who put the toffee in my beer?")

Anyway, here it is. Input welcome!

7 lbs 2-row
1.2 lb cara-red
.5 lb acidulated
.5 lb dextrine malt
10oz Munich
3 oz roasted barley
6oz dark crystal (120)

1 oz US Fuggle (70)
.5 oz US Fuggle (15)

Notes:
-Mash 151 1hr (thin mash - strike was too low, added extra water to increase temp.)
-Batch sparge: 1st runnings: 18L @ 1.042 (low?)
-Took extra on second sparge, boil extra long to reduce volume

A few of my thoughts:
-Gravity on first sparge seemed low... maybe my mash temp was too low, and ended up bringing some unfermentables (usually sweet tastes would be from too HIGH a mash temp though, no?)
- Extended boil carmelized some sugars? (I've had long boils before without the trouble?)
-Recipe:cara red, dextrine, dark crystal, munich... too many "sweeter" malts without the hop to balance them?
-Thin mash... stuck sparge...?
-Finally... I added gelatin and moved to the secondary after 12 days... kegged it a few days later... maybe it's just green? I'm not usually in a hurry, but figured I could push this one along, given the low grav.

Thanks guys!
 
Looking at that recipe off the top of my head it looks like about 30% of your grist is specialty grains. Those unfermented sugars might be causing this issue. Also, that's only what 10-15 IBUS? My guess is that the combination of those two things would contribute to what you are describing.
 
That's what I'm leaning towards as well. Still, the aroma and taste are SO distinctly, one-dimensionally "toffee/candy" that I wondered if it might have been a process issue rather than a recipe...

Anyway, thanks for the thought!
 
The 120 has a good toffee flavour to it all by itself, and you added cara-red which I assume is another carmel grain. That with the malty munich and little hops to balance out the sweetness will cause your flavour IMO.
 
Well... when in doubt.... let your poor beer age for a bit (has that advice ever been given before, on this forum? :eek: )

A week in the fridge has let this beer equalize out quite nicely. The toffee flavour is still there, and next time I won't use as many sweet malts, but this is quite drinkable. Thanks for the thoughts!
 
Thats the carared. I brewed Denny Conn's Waldo Lake Amber- used 2 lbs of it and it SLIGHTY has that flavor. I would think if I had used less hops it would have been grossly overpowering. It is really a great beer though.
 
Not sure if the question is diected at me or not? But I used US-05 on that batch. To me it tastes like what Sierra Nevada would make if they attempted a Red Ale. It has that flavor. It is really a good beer which could take a lot of hops and still be balanced. It would likely make a heck of a pale or IPA if you cut down on that munich by half and the cara-red by half. I'm in process of trying that.
 
How did the color turn out? I am in the process of formulating a Red Ale recipie, and I want a good red color.
 
I'm not good at describing colour, but it is relatively dark red-amber, with just a tinge of copper/orange maybe. Slightly darker maybe than I would have liked (ambient light only shines through in a faint red glow... you have to hold it up to a light to really see the colour well.)
 
Like already stated SG:IBU's and total caramel malts are some probable causes.

Also,
Did you use Irish Ale yeast by chance?
That what I was thinking. My last red done with an Irish yeast tasted like diacetyl... I think. Definitely a subtle 'toffee' flavor.
 

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