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Smoother/Creamier Brews

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Linkd1

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I'm fairly new to brewing but have become swept up in it and spend a good deal of my time thinking up ideas for homebrews and perusing the forums for sage advice. I have always enjoyed creamy and smoother consistency (wexford and guinness spring to mind) and im curious to see what techniques i can use to acheive this in my beers at my primative stage of brewing. I am currently extract/partial mash brewing and cannot lager or keg yet. I realize both the beers i named use nitrogen but i was wondering if there are yeast strains or techniques you guys use or can recommend?
 
Oatmeal and flaked barley can give a nice creamy, rich mouthfeel. Lactose can do that too, but lactose is only appropriate in a few styles like sweet stouts.
 
You can also try reducing the carbonation levels, drop the PSI if you're kegging, use a little less priming sugar if you bottle. I love beers on cask, the slightly warmer temps (cellar temp, ~50°) and the lighter carbonation makes them feel so much fuller and smoother.
 
I'm reading Randy Mosher's Tasting Beer now and he suggests something different when pouring beer. Pour straight down the center and get a huge head, wait for it to go down and repeat. He claims that this results in denser bubbles and a creamier mouthfeel. I read this last night in bed and haven't tested it out yet.

Also, there is a priming product sold, KremeX or something like that, which also claims to help produce a creamier head.
 
I'm reading Randy Mosher's Tasting Beer now and he suggests something different when pouring beer. Pour straight down the center and get a huge head, wait for it to go down and repeat. He claims that this results in denser bubbles and a creamier mouthfeel. I read this last night in bed and haven't tested it out yet.

Also, there is a priming product sold, KremeX or something like that, which also claims to help produce a creamier head.

Well, the mouthfeel *should* be creamier because you're knocking all the CO2 out of suspension. That's what a creamer faucet mostly does, as well.
 
Also try adding about 250g of maltodextrin. It's a long chain sugar molecule that won't ferment out. It def helps. And as was stated,minimum carbonation for the style helps too.
 
the_bird said:
Well, the mouthfeel *should* be creamier because you're knocking all the CO2 out of suspension. That's what a creamer faucet mostly does, as well.

That makes sense. I'll be putting theory to a practical test in about 20 minutes ;)
 
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