Colouring beer
Re: Colouring beer
Graham Wheeler's recipe in "BYOBRAAH" for Adnams Bitter includes 75g chocolate malt for colouring only. I have brewed this about 10 times now and is my firm favourite (thanks Graham!), narrowly beating Fullers London Pride. The chocolate malt has little discernible taste in the finished ale, and is incredibly similar to my local's Adnams (but theirs is not quite as good!)
Re: Colouring beer
Gravy browning? I remember seeing it mentioned in a Dave Line book and wondered if anyone actually used it but was too scared to ask!
Last edited by mshergold on Tue May 12, 2009 1:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Colouring beer
are well got that wrong then 

keg 18th special
keg 2 proper job clone
keg 3 fullers porter
fv, fullers london pride
bottles,Old Peck.
planned ,everything.
keg 2 proper job clone
keg 3 fullers porter
fv, fullers london pride
bottles,Old Peck.
planned ,everything.
Re: Colouring beer
Yep, but they also blend a stronger and weaker beer together as well.bloodoaf wrote:Isn't that the technique used to get the Newcastle Brown flavour?That's more to achieve a toffee flavour present in some commercial beer. It won't darken the wort as there's not enough of it to affect the bulk of the wort. Caramel/Browning or darker malts should do the trick