I would love some help with tweaking a stout recipe that I recently brewed. Here is the recipe:
3 lbs Pilsen DME
1 lb Malting Co. of Ireland Stout Malt (a light base malt with high enzyme power)
1.5 lbs. Roasted Barley (300 L)
3 lbs. Flaked Barley
1.5 oz East Kent Goldings (60 min. boil)
.5 oz East Kent Goldings (30 min. boil)
Danstar Nottingham yeast
I did a two step BIAB mash. My initial mash temp was 156 for 60 minutes. I then raised the temp to 168 for 10 minutes. I sparged through a strainer with about 4 gallons of water that was at 170 degrees. I hit 1.050 for my OG (just below the 1.051 predicted by Beersmith) and hit my FG of 1.012.
The resulting beer is good, but the flavor is not quite as dry as I would like. The flavor has more residual sweetness than I was expecting. I am trying to figure out how to alter the recipe to reduce the perception of residual sweetness. I have three ideas:
1. Mash at a lower temperature to get higher attenuation and less residual sugar.
2. Swap some of the roasted barley out with debittered black malt.
3. Us the Guinness trick of setting about 2 pints of this batch out to sour for 4 or 5 days and then add that to my wort near flameout.
What do you all think of these ideas? Any other suggestions?
3 lbs Pilsen DME
1 lb Malting Co. of Ireland Stout Malt (a light base malt with high enzyme power)
1.5 lbs. Roasted Barley (300 L)
3 lbs. Flaked Barley
1.5 oz East Kent Goldings (60 min. boil)
.5 oz East Kent Goldings (30 min. boil)
Danstar Nottingham yeast
I did a two step BIAB mash. My initial mash temp was 156 for 60 minutes. I then raised the temp to 168 for 10 minutes. I sparged through a strainer with about 4 gallons of water that was at 170 degrees. I hit 1.050 for my OG (just below the 1.051 predicted by Beersmith) and hit my FG of 1.012.
The resulting beer is good, but the flavor is not quite as dry as I would like. The flavor has more residual sweetness than I was expecting. I am trying to figure out how to alter the recipe to reduce the perception of residual sweetness. I have three ideas:
1. Mash at a lower temperature to get higher attenuation and less residual sugar.
2. Swap some of the roasted barley out with debittered black malt.
3. Us the Guinness trick of setting about 2 pints of this batch out to sour for 4 or 5 days and then add that to my wort near flameout.
What do you all think of these ideas? Any other suggestions?