Hi,
I'm in the process of fermenting an Amber Maple brew and upon testing, discovered that all the maple flavor is pretty much gone, fermented out, but giving ~15.9% ABV. For the maple syrup, I put in about 20% by volume at the end of the boil, thinking it would be enough for some of the flavor to be retained, obviously it wasn't. I have some syrup left but not sure when would be best to put it in.
I have some time to figure it out, tomorrow I'll be adding some bourbon soaked oak to the fermenter to age for about 4 weeks, smooth it out a bit.
For adding the syrup, here's my options:
1) If added to the fermenter now, (such as when adding the oak tomorrow), there's probably still enough yeast that it'll eat through that anyway, giving the same results.
2) I could add right before I'm ready to keg. To prevent the yeast from eating it up, I could do two things before adding, 1) remove as much as the yeast as I can out of the bottom, and 2) chill the batch down at least 50 F to make whatever's left drop out. It was a barleywine yeast with a lower temp range in the mid 70's, so dropping down to 50 should do the job. Then when adding in, make sure it's stirred up well as adding to make sure it doesn't all just drop down to the bottom, and immediately keg it.
I think that's it but as this is my first Maple Syrup beer, probably missing an option or two, appreciate any help.
I'm in the process of fermenting an Amber Maple brew and upon testing, discovered that all the maple flavor is pretty much gone, fermented out, but giving ~15.9% ABV. For the maple syrup, I put in about 20% by volume at the end of the boil, thinking it would be enough for some of the flavor to be retained, obviously it wasn't. I have some syrup left but not sure when would be best to put it in.
I have some time to figure it out, tomorrow I'll be adding some bourbon soaked oak to the fermenter to age for about 4 weeks, smooth it out a bit.
For adding the syrup, here's my options:
1) If added to the fermenter now, (such as when adding the oak tomorrow), there's probably still enough yeast that it'll eat through that anyway, giving the same results.
2) I could add right before I'm ready to keg. To prevent the yeast from eating it up, I could do two things before adding, 1) remove as much as the yeast as I can out of the bottom, and 2) chill the batch down at least 50 F to make whatever's left drop out. It was a barleywine yeast with a lower temp range in the mid 70's, so dropping down to 50 should do the job. Then when adding in, make sure it's stirred up well as adding to make sure it doesn't all just drop down to the bottom, and immediately keg it.
I think that's it but as this is my first Maple Syrup beer, probably missing an option or two, appreciate any help.