Moody_Copperpot
Well-Known Member
Oh and as for the tincture, that gets added when? The secondary?
For this years' pumpkin ale I decided to try to clone ST Pumking. I did a side-by-side last and it is very difficult to tell it from the genuine article. The intense aroma, unique graham cracker/raw pumpkin flavour, and spicing are all there. Recipe is based on label/ST website, various forums and my own speculation and tweaking when racking to secondary. I think the keys are the lactose and the ginger/vanilla. I really wasn't expecting that I would closely replicate the unique flavour profile of pumking, so I am both surprised and very pleased with the outcome.
Vol: 5.5 gal
Kettle Vol: 7 gal
OG: 1.090
IBU: appx. 34
SRM: appx. 11
Fermentables:
14 lbs. 2-Row Pale malt
1 lb. Victory
12 oz. Crystal 80°L
1 large Pumpkin (skinned, cubed and roasted with honey then added to mash)
1 lb. Demerara sugar (added after hot break)
Hops:
3/4 oz. Magnum @ 60 min.
1/4 oz. Saaz @ 15 min.
Additives:
8 oz. Lactose @ 15 min.
1/2 tsp. Yeast nutrient @ 10 min.
1 Whirlfloc tab @ 10 min.
2 tbsp. chopped Candied Ginger @ 5 min.
2 Cinnamon sticks @ 5 min.
1/2 tsp. Cloves @ 5 min.
1.2 tsp. grated Nutmeg @ 5 min.
1/2 tsp. Allspice @ 5 min.
1 Vanilla Bean (added to secondary)
1/2 tsp. ground Cinnamon (added to secondary)
Yeast:
2 packs Safale US-05
Mashed @ 152°F for 90 min.
Boiled for 60 min.
Fermented @ 66°F RT for 2 weeks in primary and 3 weeks in secondary. Force carbonated in keg.
Notes: The lactose could possibly be increased from 8 oz. to 10 oz., but definitely no more than that. Excluding the allspice and nutmeg might nudge it even closer to an exact clone, but it is not critical. I think that they key elements are the victory malt, lactose, vanilla and ginger.
It's not the creamy mouthfeel though, it actually TASTES like whipped cream or something like that. It's beyond just mouthfeel. It's the white whale, and we are Captain Ahab!
Probably very stupid question, but when using tincture of soaked vanilla beans, do you:
1) add only the vodka the beans were soaked in to the secondary carboy
OR
2) add the vodka and beans to the secondary carboy
Thanks in advance!!!
So my version of this is kegged, carbed, and officially delicious. I want to enter it into a local homebrew comp in Philly that's coming up - how would you all classify the base recipe for this beer? It's going to go in 21A - Spice, Herb, and Vegetable beer - therefore you have to state what the underlying beer style is. Would it be an Amber ale? Or do you think this is just best suited for the 23 Specialty Beer category?
For this years' pumpkin ale I decided to try to clone ST Pumking. I did a side-by-side last and it is very difficult to tell it from the genuine article. The intense aroma, unique graham cracker/raw pumpkin flavour, and spicing are all there. Recipe is based on label/ST website, various forums and my own speculation and tweaking when racking to secondary. I think the keys are the lactose and the ginger/vanilla. I really wasn't expecting that I would closely replicate the unique flavour profile of pumking, so I am both surprised and very pleased with the outcome.
Vol: 5.5 gal
Kettle Vol: 7 gal
OG: 1.090
IBU: appx. 34
SRM: appx. 11
Fermentables:
14 lbs. 2-Row Pale malt
1 lb. Victory
12 oz. Crystal 80°L
1 large Pumpkin (skinned, cubed and roasted with honey then added to mash)
1 lb. Demerara sugar (added after hot break)
Hops:
3/4 oz. Magnum @ 60 min.
1/4 oz. Saaz @ 15 min.
Additives:
8 oz. Lactose @ 15 min.
1/2 tsp. Yeast nutrient @ 10 min.
1 Whirlfloc tab @ 10 min.
2 tbsp. chopped Candied Ginger @ 5 min.
2 Cinnamon sticks @ 5 min.
1/2 tsp. Cloves @ 5 min.
1.2 tsp. grated Nutmeg @ 5 min.
1/2 tsp. Allspice @ 5 min.
1 Vanilla Bean (added to secondary)
1/2 tsp. ground Cinnamon (added to secondary)
Yeast:
2 packs Safale US-05
Mashed @ 152°F for 90 min.
Boiled for 60 min.
Fermented @ 66°F RT for 2 weeks in primary and 3 weeks in secondary. Force carbonated in keg.
Notes: The lactose could possibly be increased from 8 oz. to 10 oz., but definitely no more than that. Excluding the allspice and nutmeg might nudge it even closer to an exact clone, but it is not critical. I think that they key elements are the victory malt, lactose, vanilla and ginger.
I finally had a chance to sample a fresh Pumpking this weekend.
HOLY DIACETYL! This beer has diacetyl in spades. You can smell and taste it distinctly. In a way it really works with this beer, adding that hint of baked in goodness to the graham cracker crust and pumpkin spice.
A good clone of this will have to have some diacetyl.
-Scott
You are the second person to mention diacetyl, and I just don't get it. At all.
For this years' pumpkin ale I decided to try to clone ST Pumking. I did a side-by-side last and it is very difficult to tell it from the genuine article. The intense aroma, unique graham cracker/raw pumpkin flavour, and spicing are all there. Recipe is based on label/ST website, various forums and my own speculation and tweaking when racking to secondary. I think the keys are the lactose and the ginger/vanilla. I really wasn't expecting that I would closely replicate the unique flavour profile of pumking, so I am both surprised and very pleased with the outcome.
Vol: 5.5 gal
Kettle Vol: 7 gal
OG: 1.090
IBU: appx. 34
SRM: appx. 11
Fermentables:
14 lbs. 2-Row Pale malt
1 lb. Victory
12 oz. Crystal 80°L
1 large Pumpkin (skinned, cubed and roasted with honey then added to mash)
1 lb. Demerara sugar (added after hot break)
Hops:
3/4 oz. Magnum @ 60 min.
1/4 oz. Saaz @ 15 min.
Additives:
8 oz. Lactose @ 15 min.
1/2 tsp. Yeast nutrient @ 10 min.
1 Whirlfloc tab @ 10 min.
2 tbsp. chopped Candied Ginger @ 5 min.
2 Cinnamon sticks @ 5 min.
1/2 tsp. Cloves @ 5 min.
1.2 tsp. grated Nutmeg @ 5 min.
1/2 tsp. Allspice @ 5 min.
1 Vanilla Bean (added to secondary)
1/2 tsp. ground Cinnamon (added to secondary)
Yeast:
2 packs Safale US-05
Mashed @ 152°F for 90 min.
Boiled for 60 min.
Fermented @ 66°F RT for 2 weeks in primary and 3 weeks in secondary. Force carbonated in keg.
Notes: The lactose could possibly be increased from 8 oz. to 10 oz., but definitely no more than that. Excluding the allspice and nutmeg might nudge it even closer to an exact clone, but it is not critical. I think that they key elements are the victory malt, lactose, vanilla and ginger.
Uh, yeah. And that is why I said you are only the second person, ever, that I have seen/heard say that they can detect diacetyl. I get that you think you taste it, but I don't taste it. I would think that they would have that showing up in some of their other beers, because it would be something in their process. I haven't seen anybody say that about any of their other lineup, so I'm going out on a limb with people thinking they know what they are tasting, but really don't.Have you tasted it in other beers before? Some people can't taste that particular (intentional in this case) off-flavor.
BudzAndSudz said:Use real pumpkin and throw it in the boil for the last 20 minutes. Canned pumpkin is a gnarly mess to deal with and it absorbs way more than it's fair share of wort.
Ps- I can't find candied Ginger. I looked in the spice isle at the grocery store, and no luck
I still have 2 bottles of Pumking on hand for a side-by-side in two weeks. I'll post the tasting results.