Good name and good looking recipe. Not sure how it categorises as American Stout? Maris Otter, EKG and S-04. Not that I am category fixated! I just crossed the virtual pond to look at an American stout recipe and I don't think I found one....Alright here is some sweet sweet pourn for all you fans out there!
View attachment 723137
View attachment 723138
Hands down this is one of the best beers I've ever brewed. I dropped a growler by my LHBS and they loved it, couldn't believe it was 6%, and they thought it drank almost more like a dry Irish stout than an American stout.
Well it is brewed in America by an American, and although the ingredients come from several different countries, America is a melting pot, so in that spirit I consider it to be an American stout. Whether or not the BJCP would agree is really none of my concern.Good name and good looking recipe. Not sure how it categorises as American Stout? Maris Otter, EKG and S-04. Not that I am category fixated! I just crossed the virtual pond to look at an American stout recipe and I don't think I found one....![]()
That's a very good point about it being made in America by an AmericanWell it is brewed in America by an American, and although the ingredients come from several different countries, America is a melting pot, so in that spirit I consider it to be an American stout. Whether or not the BJCP would agree is really none of my concern.
I do understand your interest in brewing a 100% domestic American stout. I think you could follow the basic recipe substituting the German, English, and Belgian malts and hops with suitable American counterparts. Choose which region of the US you want it to be representative of and go from there. I was recently gifted a few pounds of Admiral Malting's Kilnsmith crystal malt and will use some of that to brew a special edition higher gravity Rhinestone Carboy that I will age on oak. I also plan on brewing a sour version with Lacto at some point.
Make it yours! That's the best thing about being a homebrewer, total freedom to brew whatever beer you want to drink.That's a very good point about it being made in America by an American
I might do as you suggest, and also use Cascade, Centennial or Willamette or something. And US05 or Bry-97.
Thank you!
Just thought I’d report back on my thoughts on the Sugar Creek barrel aged chocolate malt in my American Stout. At 5% of the grist I didn’t get any noticeable barrel characteristics and the rum aroma I thought I picked up during fermentation isn’t present either. Probably won’t use it again. I’m going to split the 5% with 2.5% each of pale chocolate and chocolate malts next time around. Also tried Galena and Northern Brewer as a hop combo that didn’t really work for me in this style. On a positive note I do like A10 darkness and will continue to use that in stouts.I'm brewing this again on Saturday, this time using Weyermann boho pils for the base malt, a pound of Admiral Maltings Kilnsmith courtesy of @markcurry and fermenting it with Denny's favorite.
A while back I rationalized the malt bill and ordered three "kits" of just the specialty malts, to which I will add my own base malt. Convenient way to stock up for future batches while retaining some flexibility.
Thanks for commenting and glad you liked the A10. I was curious about that strain I'll try that out next time around. For this batch I chose Denny's Favorite based on what @Yooper wrote about it in another thread. I'll dig that post up and link to it.Just thought I’d report back on my thoughts on the Sugar Creek barrel aged chocolate malt in my American Stout. At 5% of the grist I didn’t get any noticeable barrel characteristics and the rum aroma I thought I picked up during fermentation isn’t present either. Probably won’t use it again. I’m going to split the 5% with 2.5% each of pale chocolate and chocolate malts next time around. Also tried Galena and Northern Brewer as a hop combo that didn’t really work for me in this style. On a positive note I do like A10 darkness and will continue to use that in stouts.
I like that idea since a lot of brewers bulk buy base malt but may not do the same with specialty malts.This is a "short kit" for brewing Rhinestone Carboy, just add 12lb (or more) base malt of your choice.
AG brewers get attached to working with certain base malts and I know I'd start brewing kits if they were available like this. Also saves on shipping especially when ordering multiple kits. HB retailers could offer recipe short kits, with optional hops kit and yeast.
View attachment 754887
Don't forget the oak this time.I brewed another batch of RC stout yesterday, this time I did a partial mash; 3lbs Briess pale malt plus the specialty grain "short kit" @155 for 30 minutes, then topped up to pre-boil vol and boiled for 60 adding two cans of extra light LME during the last 15 minutes. Also had a crazy idea to use all Citra hops; half an ounce at 60, then an ounce at 20 and another ounce with two minutes left to boil. Due to my garage being 90f in August, I went with Lutra Kveik from Omega, and it's going like gangbusters.