I've done two pumpkin ales and an Apple Pie Ale. My latest pumpkin, an AG batch, and my latest apple pie ale came out pretty good. My Pumpkin used 5 and a half teaspoons of spices total. I can taste them fine in the final beer but they still aren't anywhere near as prominent or "effervescent" as you get in something like a Weyerbacher Imperial Pumpkin Ale. For my Apple Pie Ale I used 2.5 teaspoons of spices total - just Cinnamon and Nutmeg and the taste is there but could be a bit more prominent.
So, I've tried 1 minute in the boil addition, 5 minutes in the boil, and also adding an additional 1/2 teaspoon or so at bottle time soaked in vodka as I did with the apple pie ale.
So what do the pro's do? Do they do their spices at some point in the boil, do they do the spices at some point during primary fermentation, do they add it at bottling, or do they do a combination of both?? Or do they just add a huge crap load of spices more than we typically think is normal? They have to be doing something different to keep the spices so upfront with each bottle compared to my results. I'm leaning towards them using far more quantities than we see in typical recipes.
Rev.
So, I've tried 1 minute in the boil addition, 5 minutes in the boil, and also adding an additional 1/2 teaspoon or so at bottle time soaked in vodka as I did with the apple pie ale.
So what do the pro's do? Do they do their spices at some point in the boil, do they do the spices at some point during primary fermentation, do they add it at bottling, or do they do a combination of both?? Or do they just add a huge crap load of spices more than we typically think is normal? They have to be doing something different to keep the spices so upfront with each bottle compared to my results. I'm leaning towards them using far more quantities than we see in typical recipes.
Rev.