Oats.
Low abv- how to improve mouth feel/body?
- scuppeteer
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Re: Low abv- how to improve mouth feel/body?
Dave Berry
Can't be arsed to keep changing this bit, so, drinking some beer and wanting to brew many more!
Sir, you are drunk! Yes madam, and you are ugly, but in the morning I shall be sober! - WSC
Can't be arsed to keep changing this bit, so, drinking some beer and wanting to brew many more!
Sir, you are drunk! Yes madam, and you are ugly, but in the morning I shall be sober! - WSC
Re: Low abv- how to improve mouth feel/body?
Just a thought, if you are force carbonating it could you stabilise it early like wine? This way you could have the FG as high as you want and very clear. I have never heard it done but can't see any problems as long as you can force carb it.
Re: Low abv- how to improve mouth feel/body?
I've made a few low alcohol beers around 1% abv with some successful and some not so successful. Stout and IPA were both good, probably because the stout gave the opportunity to use a load of different dark flavoursome malts that don't contribute much fermentability and the IPA was all about the hops.
I tried a few times to make a bitter with a simple grain bill of Pale and Crystal malts but it always lacked that certain something. Your grain bill may be more successful than mine.
I mashed high (around 72C) and used only the first runnings for best body for all three styles. This gave me a brewhouse efficiency of 43% but the malt bill is so low for these beers anyway that adding a bit more won't break the bank. I think the St Peter's low alcohol bitter that you can buy in Tesco is made this way but I think they've gone too far down the high temperature body route and come up with something that's a bit cloying.
I have made Brew Dog Nanny State to the recipe they published and my attempt was very close to the original. For that I mashed at 'normal' temperature and treated it as a standard bitter in other respects. It's very hard to tell when fermentation has started or finished as you don't get a krausen as you might expect with something stronger. It's more like making a 23 litre yeast starter
I hope that gives you a few pointers.
Russell
I tried a few times to make a bitter with a simple grain bill of Pale and Crystal malts but it always lacked that certain something. Your grain bill may be more successful than mine.
I mashed high (around 72C) and used only the first runnings for best body for all three styles. This gave me a brewhouse efficiency of 43% but the malt bill is so low for these beers anyway that adding a bit more won't break the bank. I think the St Peter's low alcohol bitter that you can buy in Tesco is made this way but I think they've gone too far down the high temperature body route and come up with something that's a bit cloying.
I have made Brew Dog Nanny State to the recipe they published and my attempt was very close to the original. For that I mashed at 'normal' temperature and treated it as a standard bitter in other respects. It's very hard to tell when fermentation has started or finished as you don't get a krausen as you might expect with something stronger. It's more like making a 23 litre yeast starter
I hope that gives you a few pointers.
Russell
- Jocky
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Re: Low abv- how to improve mouth feel/body?
Main issue would be making sure that yeast doesn't leave behind any off flavours it would normally 'clean up' at the end of fermentation (e.g. diacetyl, acetaldehyde).
Ingredients: Water, Barley, Hops, Yeast, Seaweed, Blood, Sweat, The swim bladder of a sturgeon, My enemies tears, Scenes of mild peril, An otter's handbag and Riboflavin.