I brewed a brown porter a few weeks back and just tasted an early sample after 1 week in the bottle. Delightful!
For this brew I was running short on brown malt and decided to sub in 3% roasted wheat. Aside from that it's a pretty standard recipe - pale ale malt base, 5% chocolate, 8% medium crystal, 4% brown malt and 33 IBU of NZ Fuggles, Wyeast 1450 yeast.
This is the second porter I have brewed and the main difference (other than more experience) is the roast wheat. This version has much better mouthfeel despite lower OG and FG, and the roastiness is barely there. I'm not normally a fan of the heavy roast barley flavour but this seems completely different.
Maltster says this...
"Our Roasted Wheat Malt is produced by roasting unmalted wheat.Using Gladfield Roasted Wheat is an excellent way to impart roasted coffee and chocolate flavours without adding any of the bitterness that can sometimes come from using Roasted Barley or Chocolate Malts. This malt is a great addition to any darker beer style."
Does anyone have much experience with this malt? I'm keen to have a play, maybe an oatmeal stout with half the roast barley replaced with roast wheat? I love a good stout but I do favour porters because of that burnt/bitter flavour that you sometimes get in a stout.
For this brew I was running short on brown malt and decided to sub in 3% roasted wheat. Aside from that it's a pretty standard recipe - pale ale malt base, 5% chocolate, 8% medium crystal, 4% brown malt and 33 IBU of NZ Fuggles, Wyeast 1450 yeast.
This is the second porter I have brewed and the main difference (other than more experience) is the roast wheat. This version has much better mouthfeel despite lower OG and FG, and the roastiness is barely there. I'm not normally a fan of the heavy roast barley flavour but this seems completely different.
Maltster says this...
"Our Roasted Wheat Malt is produced by roasting unmalted wheat.Using Gladfield Roasted Wheat is an excellent way to impart roasted coffee and chocolate flavours without adding any of the bitterness that can sometimes come from using Roasted Barley or Chocolate Malts. This malt is a great addition to any darker beer style."
Does anyone have much experience with this malt? I'm keen to have a play, maybe an oatmeal stout with half the roast barley replaced with roast wheat? I love a good stout but I do favour porters because of that burnt/bitter flavour that you sometimes get in a stout.