mtbrewer403
Well-Known Member
today i started this ale in a recipie book i have called O Tannenbock Spruce Ale. according to the book this recipie comes from Benjamin Franklin which is what got me interested in the first place.
recipie goes like this here:
for one gallon
1.5 lb pale ale malt
.2 lb flaked barley
.1 carapils
.12 oz chinook hops divided in half
.04 oz simcoe hops
1 six inch spruce tip
1/2 cup molasses
i started out by mashing between 144 and 152 for one hour. the temperature stayed pretty constant at 150 but drifted every now and then. i then sparged at 170 circulating the grains three times. then boiled for 60 adding .06 oz chinook at the start of boil, .06 chinook at 30 minutes, .04 simcoe at 50, the spruce sprig at 55 and finally the molasses at 60minutes before cooling to 70 degrees and adding to fermentor. i then pitched 5 grams of S-04 english ale yeast and put in dark spot to ferment.
one of the interesting things about this one was watching the different color changes at the different steps. at the beginning of the boil before i added the first group of hops it was this really pale color. then after i added the first hops it turned kind of greenish brown and at the end after the molasses was added it turned dark brown
i actually had about a quarter cup too much so i got to sample some. it has a real nice piney molasses flavor. it was kind of bitter but i expect thatll clear out while it ferments
5 gallon variation
7.5 lb pale ale malt
1 lb flaked barley
.5 lb carapils
.6 oz chinook hops
.2 oz simcoe hops
3 six inch spruce sprigs
2 1/2 cups molasses
recipie goes like this here:
for one gallon
1.5 lb pale ale malt
.2 lb flaked barley
.1 carapils
.12 oz chinook hops divided in half
.04 oz simcoe hops
1 six inch spruce tip
1/2 cup molasses
i started out by mashing between 144 and 152 for one hour. the temperature stayed pretty constant at 150 but drifted every now and then. i then sparged at 170 circulating the grains three times. then boiled for 60 adding .06 oz chinook at the start of boil, .06 chinook at 30 minutes, .04 simcoe at 50, the spruce sprig at 55 and finally the molasses at 60minutes before cooling to 70 degrees and adding to fermentor. i then pitched 5 grams of S-04 english ale yeast and put in dark spot to ferment.
one of the interesting things about this one was watching the different color changes at the different steps. at the beginning of the boil before i added the first group of hops it was this really pale color. then after i added the first hops it turned kind of greenish brown and at the end after the molasses was added it turned dark brown
i actually had about a quarter cup too much so i got to sample some. it has a real nice piney molasses flavor. it was kind of bitter but i expect thatll clear out while it ferments
5 gallon variation
7.5 lb pale ale malt
1 lb flaked barley
.5 lb carapils
.6 oz chinook hops
.2 oz simcoe hops
3 six inch spruce sprigs
2 1/2 cups molasses