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With all due respect, as I am sure Jamil is an EXCELLENT brewer, I would disagree with his assessment that smoked malt is inappropriate in a Scotch Ale.
First of all, the BJCP guidelines specifically mention smoked malt and while the BJCP is certainly not the be-all-end all of brewing "rules," it DOES seem to be the most cited reference when you are dealing with styles concerning homebrew. For this reason, I do not understand how he can say the ingredient is inappropriate.
In addition to this, the character of "smoke" or "peat" in the beer must have originated somewhere. How do we know this character did not start in Scotland? Absence of evidence does not prove a negative. If ANYthing, one could look at historical references from Scotland and probably make a pretty strong case for using heather in the beer more than anything.
With that said, do I feel smoked malt (or even smoke character) is necessary in a Scotch Ale? ...absolutely not... but do I feel we should have one brewer's OPINION of a beer determine what builds a beer style? ...again, no way.
Oh, I just had a couple of Founder's Dirty Bastards last night and LOVED it! I think I'll drink the rest of the 6-pack tonight :cross:
With all due respect, as I am sure Jamil is an EXCELLENT brewer, I would disagree with his assessment that smoked malt is inappropriate in a Scotch Ale.
First of all, the BJCP guidelines specifically mention smoked malt and while the BJCP is certainly not the be-all-end all of brewing "rules," it DOES seem to be the most cited reference when you are dealing with styles concerning homebrew. For this reason, I do not understand how he can say the ingredient is inappropriate.
In addition to this, the character of "smoke" or "peat" in the beer must have originated somewhere. How do we know this character did not start in Scotland? Absence of evidence does not prove a negative. If ANYthing, one could look at historical references from Scotland and probably make a pretty strong case for using heather in the beer more than anything.
With that said, do I feel smoked malt (or even smoke character) is necessary in a Scotch Ale? ...absolutely not... but do I feel we should have one brewer's OPINION of a beer determine what builds a beer style? ...again, no way.
Oh, I just had a couple of Founder's Dirty Bastards last night and LOVED it! I think I'll drink the rest of the 6-pack tonight :cross:
Was the scotch ale you tried that oak aged Innis and Gunn? I love Scotch ales but I bought a bottle of that stuff to try because it sounded interesting and had a very hard time finishing it.
The oak added a harsh almost medicinal bitterness to the beer. Try some others that other posters suggested before you write off the style.
So I guessing that contradiction is ok with you? You may want to go back and read your post. Peat malt & or smoked malt is not from smoked malt but from specialty malts, water & brewing process. Its not just Jamil, he maybe more vocal than others but to me smoked malt doesn't belong in Scottish ales of any kind.
FarmerTed said:Jamil's a bit of a hypocrite himself. He rants against using any smoked malt in Scottish/Scotch ales because it's not authentic to the style, then uses Cal ale yeast to ferment his beers. I mean, come on, what the hell is authentic about that? I do agree with him, though, that the 80 shilling style beers over there are very clean, and I don't remember any peat or smoke in the ones I've had. Cal ale yeast may be clean and give the right profile for the style, but I really doubt any Scottish breweries use it.
Saxomophone said:Has anyone tried Caol Ila scotch? Some scotches are very smokey and since scotch and beer start off pretty much the same way, it seems like smoke in Scotch beers would make sense to me but I'm no expert. I don't know I'f the smokeyness comes from the malt or the barrel.
I also thought the idea of smokey malt comes from finding a way to stop the germination process and dry out the malt quickly in climates where you can't rely on other methods of drying out the malt.
I'm sure Jamil has done research on it or else he wouldn't make statements like that, but nothing wrong with questioning or making you beer however you think it should be. At the end of the day you're the one who's going to be drinking it.
I bet brewdog uses it...
I will repeat something I said in another thread on Scottish ales. I think US homebrewers get hung up on white labs/wyeast strains labeled "Scottish ale" and don't stop to consider that not every single brewery in Scotland uses that strain for every beer they make. So not every Scottish ale is going to have a subtle smoky character. I blame the bjcp style guidelines for calling it out. Even though the intent was to say "it's not out of style if there is a bit of smokiness" people read that and somehow think "if it's not smoky it isn't to style".
Except that isn't the way brewers in Scotland malted. Scottish breweries were almost all in the central Lowland belt that runs from Edinburgh to Glasgow. A region where there's no peat, but loads of coal. The distilleries that use peated malt are all in the Highlands and Islands, miles away from where the breweries were.This is always what I thought. To answer your ambiguity, the smoke in scotch whisky comes from peated malt. That is, when baking the malt to kill the germinating seed, the fires underneath the malt used peat as fuel. This perfumed the malt, and the smokiness carried into the finish product. Makes complete sense to me that when beer makers in Scotland were making beer instead of whisky, they'd use the same technique for preparing the malt (why would they do something different?). So, seems pretty ridiculous that BJCP doesn't state it as a principal component (perhaps when they established the style that had fallen out of practice).
Except that isn't the way brewers in Scotland malted. Scottish breweries were almost all in the central Lowland belt that runs from Edinburgh to Glasgow. A region where there's no peat, but loads of coal. The distilleries that use peated malt are all in the Highlands and Islands, miles away from where the breweries were.
Here are maps that demonstrate my point:
http://barclayperkins.blogspot.nl/2011/09/peat-in-scottish-brewing.html
There's no evidence that any Scottish brewer used peat-dried malt. Then again, low fermentation temperatures, long caramelising boils and low hop rates aren't suupported by historical evidence, either.
Now that the discussion and defense of the style is over, anyone have a good Scotch ale recipe? I got the itch to try my hand at the style.
Except that isn't the way brewers in Scotland malted. Scottish breweries were almost all in the central Lowland belt that runs from Edinburgh to Glasgow. A region where there's no peat, but loads of coal. The distilleries that use peated malt are all in the Highlands and Islands, miles away from where the breweries were.
Here are maps that demonstrate my point:
http://barclayperkins.blogspot.nl/2011/09/peat-in-scottish-brewing.html
There's no evidence that any Scottish brewer used peat-dried malt. Then again, low fermentation temperatures, long caramelising boils and low hop rates aren't suupported by historical evidence, either.
My wee heavy won a gold medal recently, but I still think there's room for improvement. As an experiment, I also entered it as a Belgian quad, although with more carbonation, and it won a bronze in that category.
Wow. Did you actually bother to read what I wrote?Alright, fair enough. The fact that peat was used to fire farmer's grain-drying ovens all over Scotland for thousands of years, however, seems to be a good point in that discussion. Still, my hat's off to you, sir - I didn't know the distilleries were waxing poetic and that scottish lore was slightly off. It's quite clear that there is good evidence for thinking that peat was not used by distilleries/breweries in historic scotland.
According to this argument, though, it's apparently just a recent invention of the scots to perfume the malt with peat (since, historically speaking, peat was not used to dry the malt). Apparently, then, peaty scotch whisky is not "to style" with regards to how whisky was made in scotland, historically speaking. This fact, however, doesn't seem to make it any less scottish...regardless, it still seems to me that using peated malt in a scottish ale is in line with the spirit of the style (since this is such a common practice with whisky) even if it is not in line with the letter of the style or even it's history. That seems odd - perhaps I'm putting too much emphasis on how "scottish" peaty scotches are.
Except Scottish breweries didn't use peated malt in the 19th or 20th centuries. It's breweries outside Scotland that have run with the peat thing.I get your point, that scotch ales did not use peat for a large part of their history, and home brewers incorporating peated malt is a recent spin that doesn't jive with the historical truth of the matter. The problem is that this is exactly what was done with scotch, only it's been sustained for a longer period of time. What I was trying to say is given how one of the biggest defining characteristics of scotch is its peat, and the overwhelming sense of pride Scottish people have about their scotch, it's clearly a very "Scottish idea" (as it were) to add peat to a fermented malt beverage. So, it may not be a Scottish ale according to BJCP-like criteria, but it still seems rather damn Scottish to me.
Alright, now that's a good point. You're right, it's mainly a American craft brewing invention - Scottish breweries even to this day rarely if ever use peated malt. If it ever becomes a widespread practice, though...patto1ro said:Except Scottish breweries didn't use peated malt in the 19th or 20th centuries. It's breweries outside Scotland that have run with the peat thing.
Lol, nice! It is a lot like that. Good to be active again.JonM said:This somehow reminds me of the giant chicken gag in Family Guy. Months and months and months go by where everyone goes about their daily lives and then BAM, out of the blue, Peter and the giant chicken pick up fighting right where they left off last time.