Types of Malt

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Hoppkins

Types of Malt

Post by Hoppkins » Wed Mar 26, 2008 3:18 pm

Im trying to get my head around how the different malts influence colour flavour etc.

I can see almost all recipes styles bar some use pale malt as the base and crystal/chocolate etc malts in much lesser proportions.

What would an entire crystal malt ale turn out like? Do any recipes use other malts than pale/mild/lager in greater proportion?

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Garth
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Post by Garth » Wed Mar 26, 2008 3:45 pm

I haven't done it, but a pure crystal brew would be minging, also crystal has no diastatic power

any more than about 20% crystal in a brew be sickly and cloying.

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TC2642
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Post by TC2642 » Wed Mar 26, 2008 4:00 pm

Agree with Garth, pretty grim, try using smaller quantities first and tasting what the various malts are like before toning in a beer to your own requirements. The most crystal I have ever used was around 500gms in a APA with an OG of 1057, it turned out really well because the Safale 05 yeast took the gravity down so low, and I didn't want a too dry a beer, there was a nice balance.
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Hoppkins

Post by Hoppkins » Wed Mar 26, 2008 4:29 pm

I understand. Thanks for the replies!

steve_flack

Re: Types of Malt

Post by steve_flack » Wed Mar 26, 2008 6:08 pm

Hoppkins wrote:Do any recipes use other malts than pale/mild/lager in greater proportion?
I've seen a Munich Dunkel (a dark lager) recipe that is nearly all Munich Malt with a smidgen of carafa special for colouring. It's in Jamil Zainasheff's book.

oblivious

Post by oblivious » Wed Mar 26, 2008 6:47 pm

Munich Malt works great in a lot of ale recipe, especially for American hop IPA's



also just for fun in theory you can make a beer with 100% Aromatic malt :wink:

steve_flack

Post by steve_flack » Wed Mar 26, 2008 6:49 pm

oblivious wrote: also just for fun in theory you can make a beer with 100% Aromatic malt :wink:
I once tried chewing a bit of melanoidin/aromatic malt....I could taste it for ages afterwards.

oblivious

Post by oblivious » Wed Mar 26, 2008 7:08 pm

steve_flack wrote:
oblivious wrote: also just for fun in theory you can make a beer with 100% Aromatic malt :wink:
I once tried chewing a bit of melanoidin/aromatic malt....I could taste it for ages afterwards.
Interesting

From what I heard the beer was not the great

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Post by Barley Water » Wed Mar 26, 2008 7:24 pm

I have some Munich Dunkel on tap right now and the base malt is Munich malt with a little carafa II for color and a touch of Meloidin to kick up the malt impression just a little more. I do a triple decoction and ferment using the usual German lager yeasts, it turns out just great. Not my idea of a light beer however.

I have also seen formulations using almost 100% Vienna malt (although I have not yet tried making a beer like that myself). I think that later in the spring, I will try it as I would like to put together a Vienna lager which is a little lighter than an Octoberfest (will go down easier in the HOT Texas summers).

The only thing about using these more highly kilned malts is that they are not supposed to have the diastatic power of the more lightly kilned varieties. I suspect it would be a bad idea to try and dump too much corn or rice into the mash with them since you run the risk of not being able to convert it all (although I have never tried it myself so I would defer to others with more experience).
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Abbey Triple (in bottles), Munich Helles, Best Bitter (TT Landlord clone), English IPA
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Post by TC2642 » Thu Mar 27, 2008 5:22 pm

Forgot to add that you can do this with Smoked malt aswell, although I would go against making a beer with a large percentage of peat smoked malt in it. 125gms gives a noticable taste in 23ltrs.
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Post by Aleman » Thu Mar 27, 2008 6:28 pm

As mentioned you cxan make a beer with 100% weyermann smoked malt in it . . . . its not bad, I've made a couple of Smoked beers one had 30% Smoked malt and the other was more than 50% (Vossy My Schwarzbier ;) ) In neither case was it overpowering (IMO) . . . . The peat smoked malt is supposed to be very phenolic though

BarryNL

Post by BarryNL » Sat Mar 29, 2008 9:37 pm

TC2642 wrote:Forgot to add that you can do this with Smoked malt aswell, although I would go against making a beer with a large percentage of peat smoked malt in it. 125gms gives a noticable taste in 23ltrs.
I did have a strange German beer that was really heavy on the smoked malt at the House of 100 Beers in Berlin. I was like drinking bacon.

oblivious

Post by oblivious » Mon Mar 31, 2008 7:59 am

My smoke porter used 18-20% rauchmalt, but next time i would up it to around 30%

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