Leveller.

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Robdog

Leveller.

Post by Robdog » Tue Feb 03, 2009 3:56 pm

Think about trying the recipe below and was wondering if anyone else had tried it and what they thought.

Im thinking about adding 10-15g goldings as aroma hops, not sure yet though i may just follow it as is.

LEVELLER Springhead Brewery Newark

25 litre batch OG 1048 ABV 4.8%

HALCYON PALE MALT 4204 gms
AMBER MALT 922 gms

HOPS boil time 90 minutes

NORTHDOWN 40 gms No EBU given I calculated 30 EBU.

Yeast of your choice

Robdog

Re: Leveller.

Post by Robdog » Wed Feb 04, 2009 4:34 pm

Right it seems nobody has tried this but i still fancy giving it a go.

Does the quantity of Amber Malt seem high here? Ive checked revies of the beer online and it says it is a mix of pale and amber but as ive never used amber before not sure if this amount will ruin a brew.

The review says its a complex brew with coffe and toffee notes which im guessing is down to the amber malt.

adm

Re: Leveller.

Post by adm » Wed Feb 04, 2009 5:28 pm

Wikipedia says:

Amber malt
Amber malt is a more toasted form of pale malt, kilned at temperatures of 150-160 °C, and is used in brown porter; older formulations of brown porter use amber malt as a base malt (though this was diastatic and produced in different conditions to a modern amber malt). Amber malt has a bitter flavor which mellows on ageing, and can be quite intensely flavored; in addition to its use in porter, it also appears in a diverse range of British beer recipes. ASBC 50-70/EBC 100-140; amber malt has no diastatic power.

I've made a couple of beers with Amber malt, but my average usage is only about 150g per batch and at that level it adds a nice crisp flavour (I don't think any of the beers survived long enough to mellow with age though....)

I'd be wary about using that much of it - although it would probably give the coffee/toffee type flavour. It might be quite harsh young though.

Robdog

Re: Leveller.

Post by Robdog » Wed Feb 04, 2009 7:29 pm

adm wrote:Wikipedia says:

Amber malt
Amber malt is a more toasted form of pale malt, kilned at temperatures of 150-160 °C, and is used in brown porter; older formulations of brown porter use amber malt as a base malt (though this was diastatic and produced in different conditions to a modern amber malt). Amber malt has a bitter flavor which mellows on ageing, and can be quite intensely flavored; in addition to its use in porter, it also appears in a diverse range of British beer recipes. ASBC 50-70/EBC 100-140; amber malt has no diastatic power.

I've made a couple of beers with Amber malt, but my average usage is only about 150g per batch and at that level it adds a nice crisp flavour (I don't think any of the beers survived long enough to mellow with age though....)

I'd be wary about using that much of it - although it would probably give the coffee/toffee type flavour. It might be quite harsh young though.



Good thinking mate i think i may do another TEA but try and make it just a bit stronger. I found that was really nice after just a few days in the cornie. :D

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