Traditional porter recipe
- Deebee
- Even further under the Table
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Traditional porter recipe
Hi all,
I made a great porter a little while ago ( at least I think its great) and want to make a larger version for a keg.
I am however looking for a more traditional porter for bottling:-
I am thinking along the lines of a normal fullers London Porter and will try to get some Wlp002 for the job ( if not then good old S-04 will do the job nicely)
Does anyone have a really traditional porter recipe? I have no more access to new books at present so if you could either list it of pm me it that would be awesome. I have and can get most malts.
Thanks
I made a great porter a little while ago ( at least I think its great) and want to make a larger version for a keg.
I am however looking for a more traditional porter for bottling:-
I am thinking along the lines of a normal fullers London Porter and will try to get some Wlp002 for the job ( if not then good old S-04 will do the job nicely)
Does anyone have a really traditional porter recipe? I have no more access to new books at present so if you could either list it of pm me it that would be awesome. I have and can get most malts.
Thanks
- Fuggled Mind
- Hollow Legs
- Posts: 381
- Joined: Mon Dec 14, 2009 6:13 pm
- Location: Zurich, Switzerland
Re: Traditional porter recipe
Dave
Whilst not strictly traditional, John Palmer's Port O' Palmer recipe from his How to Brew website is described a good keeping porter. Just brewed this yesterday subbing Carafa I for the chocolate malt and WGV hops for the Fuggles. I drank the sample from the trial jar and thought it had intense coffee flavours. Look forward to drinking it when it's actually beer.
Recipe is here:
http://www.howtobrew.com/section4/chapter19-3.html
Don't forget theShut Up About Barclay Perkins Let's Brew Wednesdays recipies which has some historic porter recipes.
Link here to the recipes
http://www.unholymess.com/blog/lets-brew/comment-page-1
Cheers
Jason
Whilst not strictly traditional, John Palmer's Port O' Palmer recipe from his How to Brew website is described a good keeping porter. Just brewed this yesterday subbing Carafa I for the chocolate malt and WGV hops for the Fuggles. I drank the sample from the trial jar and thought it had intense coffee flavours. Look forward to drinking it when it's actually beer.
Recipe is here:
http://www.howtobrew.com/section4/chapter19-3.html
Don't forget theShut Up About Barclay Perkins Let's Brew Wednesdays recipies which has some historic porter recipes.
Link here to the recipes
http://www.unholymess.com/blog/lets-brew/comment-page-1
Cheers
Jason
Once, during Prohibition, I was forced to live for days on nothing but food and water.
W. C. Fields
W. C. Fields
- Barley Water
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Re: Traditional porter recipe
Fuller's London Porter is the best. There is a clone recipe published by BYO which is pretty good. Last time I made it, I boiled down some of the first running to accentuate the caramel flavors and I was very happy with the result. The recipe in the great Jamil's book is similar and I'm sure very good also. The key is using quite a bit of brown malt, it has that distinctive "Fuller's" flavor. Also, I would try to use the Fuller's yeast, if you are lucky you will get just a touch of diacetyl which plays really well with the caramel flavors. 

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)
- Fuggled Mind
- Hollow Legs
- Posts: 381
- Joined: Mon Dec 14, 2009 6:13 pm
- Location: Zurich, Switzerland
Re: Traditional porter recipe
Good point - that was the episode on brown malt. Quite an interesting read. Recipe for Fuller's London porter can be found here. The Double Stout recipe looks good too
https://byo.com/stories/issue/item/1751-brown-malt
Cheers
Jason
https://byo.com/stories/issue/item/1751-brown-malt
Cheers
Jason
Once, during Prohibition, I was forced to live for days on nothing but food and water.
W. C. Fields
W. C. Fields
-
- Falling off the Barstool
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- Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2007 5:30 pm
- Location: Fort Wayne, Indiana
Re: Traditional porter recipe
I've never had Fuller's London porter, but this is my go-to recipe that comes out pretty good.Deebee wrote:Hi all,
I made a great porter a little while ago ( at least I think its great) and want to make a larger version for a keg.
I am however looking for a more traditional porter for bottling:-
I am thinking along the lines of a normal fullers London Porter and will try to get some Wlp002 for the job ( if not then good old S-04 will do the job nicely)
Does anyone have a really traditional porter recipe? I have no more access to new books at present so if you could either list it of pm me it that would be awesome. I have and can get most malts.
Thanks
67% pale ale malt
11% British brown malt
11% carawheat malt
11% pale chocolate malt
28 IBUs goldings for 45 minutes
3 IBUs goldings for 10 minutes
S-04
Mash at 152f for 45 minutes.
I'm just here for the beer.
-
- Falling off the Barstool
- Posts: 3667
- Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2007 5:30 pm
- Location: Fort Wayne, Indiana
Re: Traditional porter recipe
I have plans to brew this as a rye porter using chucolate rye malt instead of the pale chocolate and subbing one pound of rye for one pound of pale ale malt; maybe a bit of crystal rye in place of some of the carawheat.Rookie wrote:I've never had Fuller's London porter, but this is my go-to recipe that comes out pretty good.
67% pale ale malt
11% British brown malt
11% carawheat malt
11% pale chocolate malt
28 IBUs goldings for 45 minutes
3 IBUs goldings for 10 minutes
S-04
Mash at 152f for 45 minutes.
I'm just here for the beer.
Re: Traditional porter recipe
I brewed a cracking clone (of sorts) of the 1952 Whitbread ES if you're interested. It has a good mix of brown malt, chocolate malt and dark invert.
I'm going for a porter based on the 1810-1815 Whitbread's, which should be simple but really good!
OG 1.055 - FG 1.013 5.5% abv, 55IBU
3.8kg Pale Malt (68%)
1.75kg Brown Malt (32%)
Boil:
60 - 50g Challenger
20 - 20g Challenger
Dry hop: 25g EKG.
I'm going for a porter based on the 1810-1815 Whitbread's, which should be simple but really good!
OG 1.055 - FG 1.013 5.5% abv, 55IBU
3.8kg Pale Malt (68%)
1.75kg Brown Malt (32%)
Boil:
60 - 50g Challenger
20 - 20g Challenger
Dry hop: 25g EKG.
- Deebee
- Even further under the Table
- Posts: 2324
- Joined: Thu May 21, 2009 9:13 am
- Location: Mid North West Norway
Re: Traditional porter recipe
Sounda awesome.JKaranka wrote:I brewed a cracking clone (of sorts) of the 1952 Whitbread ES if you're interested. It has a good mix of brown malt, chocolate malt and dark invert.
I'm going for a porter based on the 1810-1815 Whitbread's, which should be simple but really good!
OG 1.055 - FG 1.013 5.5% abv, 55IBU
3.8kg Pale Malt (68%)
1.75kg Brown Malt (32%)
Boil:
60 - 50g Challenger
20 - 20g Challenger
Dry hop: 25g EKG.
Which yeast?