Odds 'N' Sods
Odds 'N' Sods
Hi fella's
I would like some thoughts and/or comments on the following recipe please.
I have some odds 'n' sods left over so I thought I would chuck them in and see what happens. As I am not an experianced grain brewer of long standing, I would be pleased if anyone can make any suggestions.
THE RECIPE
Marris otter Malt 3.250Kg
Wheat Malt 800grms
Carafa III malt 150grms (just to add a bit of colour)
HOPS
Styrian Golding 840grms 90min boil
Citra 250grm 15mins
Maybe dry hop with a few citra.
According to ' Brewmate ' the colour is listed as 16.7. IBU 539. ABV 4.22.
Any thoughts or improvements would be most welcome.
Cheers
I would like some thoughts and/or comments on the following recipe please.
I have some odds 'n' sods left over so I thought I would chuck them in and see what happens. As I am not an experianced grain brewer of long standing, I would be pleased if anyone can make any suggestions.
THE RECIPE
Marris otter Malt 3.250Kg
Wheat Malt 800grms
Carafa III malt 150grms (just to add a bit of colour)
HOPS
Styrian Golding 840grms 90min boil
Citra 250grm 15mins
Maybe dry hop with a few citra.
According to ' Brewmate ' the colour is listed as 16.7. IBU 539. ABV 4.22.
Any thoughts or improvements would be most welcome.
Cheers
Re: Odds 'N' Sods
I hope those hops weights are out by a factor of ten. Thats way too much.
Did you mean 84 grammes and 25 grammes?
Event then the bittering hops are way too much.
I don't like over bittered ales - is there a hophead in the house?
Did you mean 84 grammes and 25 grammes?
Event then the bittering hops are way too much.
I don't like over bittered ales - is there a hophead in the house?
Re: Odds 'N' Sods
Yeah, sorry, I got carried away with the noughts.
What do suggest for the bittering hops.
Like I said, I am not a very experianced grain brewer.
So I would be gratefull of some guidance.
What do suggest for the bittering hops.
Like I said, I am not a very experianced grain brewer.
So I would be gratefull of some guidance.
Re: Odds 'N' Sods
I would go
Styrian Golding 20grms 90min boil
Citra 25grm 15mins
Styrian Golding 64g 15 mins
Thats just me.
Styrian Golding 20grms 90min boil
Citra 25grm 15mins
Styrian Golding 64g 15 mins
Thats just me.
Odp: Odds 'N' Sods
150 grams of Carafa 3 will put you in about 50 EBC which is quite dark. Not black as stout, but definitely darker than mentioned 17 EBC, which is light amber.
Check if your malt database has proper colour spec for Carafa, c3 should be ~1100 EBC.
Check if your malt database has proper colour spec for Carafa, c3 should be ~1100 EBC.
Re: Odds 'N' Sods
Thanks Zgoda
I am looking for it to be a mid to nut brown colour. ( I got a thing about yellow beers ).
So what you suggest for the carafa ?
I am looking for it to be a mid to nut brown colour. ( I got a thing about yellow beers ).
So what you suggest for the carafa ?
Odp: Odds 'N' Sods
70-80 grams should be enough.
Re: Odds 'N' Sods
Well Zgoda
I have brewed it to your recomendations. Looks good, the wort tatsed good too, so I will let this tread know when it settled and up for drinking.
I will invite a couple of friends round to sample the goods and let you all know the verdict.
I have christened it ,' Wishing Well ' that is wishing it tasted better and hope you are well after drinking it.
heers.
I have brewed it to your recomendations. Looks good, the wort tatsed good too, so I will let this tread know when it settled and up for drinking.
I will invite a couple of friends round to sample the goods and let you all know the verdict.
I have christened it ,' Wishing Well ' that is wishing it tasted better and hope you are well after drinking it.
heers.
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Re: Odds 'N' Sods
it depends what you want from this, I would get a nice balance of bittering, bearing in mind its low gravity, then go for it late for taste/aroma. but you dont need to use everything up, they'll keep till next order comes thro



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Re: Odds 'N' Sods
For the original poster; as a point of reference when trying to come up with a formulation try dividing the expected IBU's by the original gravity minus one multiplied by 1,000. So for an 1.048 O.G. beer with expected bitterness of 24 IBU that fraction would be .50. Most beers if brewed correctly will have a ratio of say .20 to maybe as high as 1.00. Although some beers may fall outside those ratios, generally speaking something is wrong if you do the calculation and the ratios come up outside this range. Even an imperial IPA will rarely exceed 1.00 and an insipid American lager is rarely less than .20. Most beer styles have ratios which fall into a rather narrow range across the commericial example of that style. When designing a recipe, I usually calculate this ratio on a similar beer and design my hopping schedule to mimic that ratio given the anticipated O.G. Of course, once I have brewed something once I then start changing things incrimentally by taste and rarely bother with the calculations after the initial batch. So, let's say I want to make an Octoberfest with an original gravity of 1.055 with at ratio of about .40, that would imply that I need to hop such that I get about 22 IBU's. Brewing is all about getting a nice balance between hop bitterness and malt sweetness, that is what makes this whole game fun.
Drinking:Saison (in bottles), Belgian Dubbel (in bottles), Oud Bruin (in bottles), Olde Ale (in bottles),
Abbey Triple (in bottles), Munich Helles, Best Bitter (TT Landlord clone), English IPA
Conditioning: Traditional bock bier, CAP
Fermenting: Munich Dunkel
Next up: Bitter (London Pride like), ESB
So many beers to make, so little time (and cold storage space)
Abbey Triple (in bottles), Munich Helles, Best Bitter (TT Landlord clone), English IPA
Conditioning: Traditional bock bier, CAP
Fermenting: Munich Dunkel
Next up: Bitter (London Pride like), ESB
So many beers to make, so little time (and cold storage space)
Re: Odds 'N' Sods
Well I bottled my 'Odds & Sods' brew today, after having racked it off into another FV and letting it stand for a week @ 12 degrees. It's starbright.
It tastes very nice, although it's a bit sweet. Will the degree of sweetness decrease when it has matured in the bottles ? If not, how can I make the next brew a little less sweet ?
Clearly it's one of the ingrediiance doing this, but which one ?
To remind you of the recipe for 23ltr !!!!!!!
3.25 Kg marris Otter
800gr Wheat Malt.
80gr Carafa lll malt.
Hops
Styrian 20gr @ 90
Citra 25gr @ 15
Styrian 64gr @ 15
Yeast, Nottingham
Cheers.
It tastes very nice, although it's a bit sweet. Will the degree of sweetness decrease when it has matured in the bottles ? If not, how can I make the next brew a little less sweet ?
Clearly it's one of the ingrediiance doing this, but which one ?
To remind you of the recipe for 23ltr !!!!!!!
3.25 Kg marris Otter
800gr Wheat Malt.
80gr Carafa lll malt.
Hops
Styrian 20gr @ 90
Citra 25gr @ 15
Styrian 64gr @ 15
Yeast, Nottingham
Cheers.