

You might be overdoing the dark malts there. The unmalted grain imparts a nice grainy taste and is also good for head retention.djseaton wrote:That looks like a cracking mix there,
Instead of .5 lb = 227 g, Unmalted grain of your choice: porridge oats, flaked barley, torrified wheat, etc.
Would i be able to used 227g of Chocolate Malt? or would this be over powering?
Adding Chocolate Malt is an excellent idea. That's the fun of this basic recipe, you can tweak it all kinds of ways. However, I'd take-away from the brown/crystal or R.B./B.M. percentages, not the unmalted percentage. It's my firm belief the unmalted grain leads to full body and mouthfeel, head retention and lace, preventing it from attentuating too far and becoming harsh, thin, and watery.djseaton wrote:That looks like a cracking mix there,
Instead of .5 lb = 227 g, Unmalted grain of your choice: porridge oats, flaked barley, torrified wheat, etc.
Would i be able to used 227g of Chocolate Malt? or would this be over powering?
Oh I don't know, Seymour, there must surely be a point of diminishing returns on the dark malt additions. I often brew a Guinness clone, (drinking a glass of it right now as it happens) and it takes 500gm roast barley in a 23 l brew. I could imagine that much more RB would just increase bitterness to a not very tasty level.seymour wrote:Adding Chocolate Malt is an excellent idea. That's the fun of this basic recipe, you can tweak it all kinds of ways. However, I'd take-away from the brown/crystal or R.B./B.M. percentages, not the unmalted percentage. It's my firm belief the unmalted grain leads to full body and mouthfeel, head retention and lace, preventing it from attentuating too far and becoming harsh, thin, and watery.djseaton wrote:That looks like a cracking mix there,
Instead of .5 lb = 227 g, Unmalted grain of your choice: porridge oats, flaked barley, torrified wheat, etc.
Would i be able to used 227g of Chocolate Malt? or would this be over powering?
[edit: Dave S beat me to it, but it sounds like we're in perfect agreement, though on the other hand, I think it's hard to put too many dark grains in a stout. As long as you've got a fermentable enough pale base, the rest just makes it blacker and blacker and more complex. Have fun with it.]