What style is this recipe?

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Jimbodaman

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I stumbled into a new homebrew store in town (new to me anyways) and left with a complete recipe off the top of my head, I don't care about style guidelines, I let my palate decide if it's good or bad, however I'm curious what y'all think it is. It's already been brewed and is bubbling away here are the stats:

5 gal into fermentor
1.072 SG
85% efficiency! (unexpected, good crush I presume)
30 IBU's

Grain Bill:
5 lb Simpsons Maris Otter
5 lb Light Munich (10L)
1 lb Crystal 40L
1 lb White Wheat Malt
.25 lb Pale Chocolate (200-250L)

Mash
145F for 10 minutes (whoops, happy accident perhaps)
added ~ 1/2 gal of boiling water to bring it up to 154F (rest for 1 hour)
Batch sparge

Hops
0.6 oz galena 60 min (25 IBU)
1 oz Saaz 20 min (5 IBU)

Yeast:
2 dry packets US-05

Ferment @ 62F for 5 days
67F until I bottle (4-5 more weeks, no time)
Primary only


Thanks for any input, I'll be sure to post a picture and tasting notes when it's ready.
 
a pound of crystal & .25 lb of chocolate?
that's brown town.
but with such a big og, not really to any particular style
 
Well plugging it into brewers friend it's a 7.6% ABV, SRM 18 brown..
 
I stumbled into a new homebrew store in town (new to me anyways) and left with a complete recipe off the top of my head, I don't care about style guidelines, I let my palate decide if it's good or bad, however I'm curious what y'all think it is. It's already been brewed and is bubbling away here are the stats:

5 gal into fermentor
1.072 SG
85% efficiency! (unexpected, good crush I presume)
30 IBU's

Grain Bill:
5 lb Simpsons Maris Otter
5 lb Light Munich (10L)
1 lb Crystal 40L
1 lb White Wheat Malt
.25 lb Pale Chocolate (200-250L)

Well plugging it into brewers friend it's a 7.6% ABV, SRM 18 brown..
That's some good efficiency, I would've only got 1.064 in a 5.0 gallon

I get 15.9 SRM in Beersmith. Depending on how much that pale chocolate comes through, you will be somewhere between an American Amber and an American Brown. Although you'll be high on ABV for both of those. Maybe an Imperial Amber/Brown?
 
It fits all characteristics of 17A Strong British Ale.

Overall Impression: An ale of respectable alcoholic strength, traditionally bottled-conditioned and cellared. Can have a wide range of interpretations, but most will have varying degrees of malty richness, late hops and bitterness, fruity esters, and alcohol warmth. Judges should allow for a significant range in character, as long as the beer is within the alcohol strength range and has an interesting ‘British’ character, it likely fits the style. The malt and adjunct flavors and intensity can vary widely, but any combination should result in an agreeable palate experience.

Aroma: Malty
-sweet with fruity esters, often with a complex blend of dried-fruit, caramel, nuts, toffee, and/or other specialty malt aromas. Some alcohol notes are acceptable, but shouldn’t be hot or solventy. Hop aromas can vary widely, but typically have earthy, resiny, fruity, and/or floral notes. The balance can vary widely, but most examples will have a blend of malt, fruit, hops, and alcohol in varying intensities.

Appearance: Deep gold to dark reddish-brown color (many are fairly dark). Generally clear, although darker versions may be almost opaque. Moderate to low cream- to light tan-colored head; average retention.

Flavor: Medium to high malt character often rich with nutty, toffee, or caramel flavors. Light chocolate notes are sometimes
found in darker beers. May have interesting flavor complexity from brewing sugars. Balance is often malty, but may be well hopped, which affects the impression of maltiness. Moderate fruity esters are common, often with a dark fruit or dried fruit character. The finish may vary from medium dry to somewhat sweet. Alcoholic strength should be evident, though not overwhelming. Diacetyl low to none, and is generally not desirable.

Mouthfeel: Medium to full, chewy body. Alcohol warmth is often evident and always welcome. Low to moderate carbonation. Smooth texture.

Comments: As an entry category more than a style, the strength and character of examples can vary widely. Fits in the style space between normal gravity beers (strong bitters, brown ales, English porters) and barleywines. Can include pale malty-hoppy beers, English winter warmers, strong dark milds, smaller Burton ales, and other unique beers in the general gravity range that don’t fit other categories. Traditionally a bottle-conditioned product suitable for cellaring.

History: The heritage varies since this category generally reflects a grouping of unrelated minor styles with limited production. Some are historical recreations while others are modern. Some directly descend from older styles such as Burton ales, while others maintain a historical connection with older beers. As a grouping, the notion is relatively modern since beers of this strength category would not have been abnormal in past centuries. Do not use this category grouping to infer historical relationships between examples; this is almost a modern British specialty category where the ‘special’ attribute is alcohol level.

Characteristic Ingredients: Grists vary, often based on pale malt with caramel and specialty malts. Some darker examples suggest that dark malts (e.g., chocolate, black malt) may be appropriate, though sparingly so as to avoid an overly roasted character. Sugary adjuncts are common, as are starchy adjuncts (maize, flaked barley, wheat). Finishing hops are traditionally English.

Style Comparison: Significant overlap in gravity with old ales, but not having a stale or aged character. A wide range of interpretations is possible. Should not be as rich or strong as an English Barleywine. Stronger than the stronger everyday beers (strong bitters, brown ales, porters). More specialty malt and/or sugar character than American Strong Ales.

Vital Statistics:
OG: 1.055 – 1.080
IBUs: 30 – 60
FG: 1.015 – 1.022
SRM: 8 – 22
ABV: 5.5 – 8.0%
Commercial Examples: Fuller’s 1845, Harvey’s Elizabethan Ale, J.W. Lees Manchester Star, Samuel Smith’s Winter Welcome, Young's Winter Warmer
 
That's some good efficiency, I would've only got 1.064 in a 5.0 gallon

I get 15.9 SRM in Beersmith. Depending on how much that pale chocolate comes through, you will be somewhere between an American Amber and an American Brown. Although you'll be high on ABV for both of those. Maybe an Imperial Amber/Brown?

I usually get 70-75% efficiency so the high SG was unexpected I was shooting for roughly 5.5 gal of 1.060 beer, but I'm not complaining it's an exciting process. Maybe I'll dry hop with an ounce of cascade and/or add frozen strawberries/blueberries.
 
It's on the threshold between a dark amber and light brown ale, without doubt. It all depends on how much colour and roast character you get from that chocolate malt. At only 2% of total grist, you're probably only getting a hint of roast.

EDIT: 1.072 OG? Never mind.
 
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