Scottish Heavy
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- Piss Artist
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Scottish Heavy
Hello
I've just upgraded my kit from doing a partial mash and I am now looking to do my first full all grain. I'm hankering after something malty and therefore...
does anyone have a receipe for a scottish heavy 80 shilling type thing.
thanks
Wilf
I've just upgraded my kit from doing a partial mash and I am now looking to do my first full all grain. I'm hankering after something malty and therefore...
does anyone have a receipe for a scottish heavy 80 shilling type thing.
thanks
Wilf
- seymour
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Re: Scottish Heavy
Here you go, though I've learned mine is much higher gravity than historical recipes:
SEYMOUR SCOTTISH EXPORT 80/-
GRAINBILL:
9 lbs = kg, British Two-row Pale Malt (Maris Otter, Golden Promise, etc)
1 lb = g, British Medium Crystal (around 70-80°L ideally)
6 oz = g, Scotch Oats (rob your kitchen, AKA steel-cut oats, pin-head oats, etc)
MASH @ 154°F/68°C for 60 minutes or until converted
HOPS:
1 oz = g, Fuggles or Goldings, 90 minutes
Pinch of calcium carbonate in mash, pinch of gypsum in boil kettle to make the hops pop. Irish moss near end of boil for clarity.
BOIL 90 minutes
YEAST:
McEwans strain, available as Wyeast 1728 liquid yeast
-OR- in a pinch, less authentic Safale S-33 dry yeast
FERMENT @ 55-70°F/13-21°C
PRIME bottles/cask with 1/3 cup brown cane sugar, boiled with a bit of water
STATS assume 77% mash efficiency and 77% yeast attenuation:
OG: 1.050
FG: 1.012
ABV: 4.9%
IBU: 16
COLOUR: 11°SRM/22°EBC
SEYMOUR SCOTTISH EXPORT 80/-
GRAINBILL:
9 lbs = kg, British Two-row Pale Malt (Maris Otter, Golden Promise, etc)
1 lb = g, British Medium Crystal (around 70-80°L ideally)
6 oz = g, Scotch Oats (rob your kitchen, AKA steel-cut oats, pin-head oats, etc)
MASH @ 154°F/68°C for 60 minutes or until converted
HOPS:
1 oz = g, Fuggles or Goldings, 90 minutes
Pinch of calcium carbonate in mash, pinch of gypsum in boil kettle to make the hops pop. Irish moss near end of boil for clarity.
BOIL 90 minutes
YEAST:
McEwans strain, available as Wyeast 1728 liquid yeast
-OR- in a pinch, less authentic Safale S-33 dry yeast
FERMENT @ 55-70°F/13-21°C
PRIME bottles/cask with 1/3 cup brown cane sugar, boiled with a bit of water
STATS assume 77% mash efficiency and 77% yeast attenuation:
OG: 1.050
FG: 1.012
ABV: 4.9%
IBU: 16
COLOUR: 11°SRM/22°EBC
Last edited by seymour on Thu Jan 17, 2013 2:19 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Scottish Heavy
thanks very much.
wilf
wilf
Re: Scottish Heavy
I've got the recipe for Maclay's 80/-, if you're interested. Several, in fact.
- seymour
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Re: Scottish Heavy
Of course we're interested. Fire away!patto1ro wrote:I've got the recipe for Maclay's 80/-, if you're interested. Several, in fact.
Re: Scottish Heavy
5th Aug 1965 MAclay 80/-
OG 1040
FG 1013
ABV 3.57
App. Attenuation 65.71%
hops 2.25 oz English & Styrian Goldings
Mash @ 157º F
pale malt 74.91%
no. 1 sugar 7.68%
DCS sugar 3.84%
flaked maize 11.52%
OG 1040
FG 1013
ABV 3.57
App. Attenuation 65.71%
hops 2.25 oz English & Styrian Goldings
Mash @ 157º F
pale malt 74.91%
no. 1 sugar 7.68%
DCS sugar 3.84%
flaked maize 11.52%
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Re: Scottish Heavy
Put some of the first runnings in a seperate pot and reduce to a syrup, then return it to the main boil. This increases the maltiness.
I'm just here for the beer.
Re: Scottish Heavy
If you want a beer like they brew in Scotland, really don't do this. No Scottish brewery ever did this as far as I'm aware.Rookie wrote:Put some of the first runnings in a seperate pot and reduce to a syrup, then return it to the main boil. This increases the maltiness.
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Re: Scottish Heavy
I'll take your word for it as I've never researched it. I was suggesting it to increase the maltiness. A really long boil would achieve the same thing.patto1ro wrote:If you want a beer like they brew in Scotland, really don't do this. No Scottish brewery ever did this as far as I'm aware.Rookie wrote:Put some of the first runnings in a seperate pot and reduce to a syrup, then return it to the main boil. This increases the maltiness.
I'm just here for the beer.
- seymour
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Re: Scottish Heavy
Bump.
Did you end up brewing a Scottish Heavy?
Did you end up brewing a Scottish Heavy?
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Re: Scottish Heavy
Not yet life is getting in the way! 

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Re: Scottish Heavy
Right I'm giving this a shot tomorrow night. I have the malts but forgot the yeast so its going to have to be nottingham as that what's i've got
should I adjust the mash temp a bit to try and compensate for the yeast if so which way do I go. I think that 68-69C might counteract the greater attenuation of the nottingham but have I got that right.
As this is the first full mash with my shiny new mash tun and stainless pan this is my plan but please help if I've missed something
Heat 20 liters water to 75C
into mash tun (cool box)
Add grains and mash for 90 minutes
Drain and add another 15 liters of water at 80C
Drain into boiler
Boil for 90 minutes with hops
Cool and ferment in a bucket.
what do you think to that?
Looking forward to it.
wilf
should I adjust the mash temp a bit to try and compensate for the yeast if so which way do I go. I think that 68-69C might counteract the greater attenuation of the nottingham but have I got that right.
As this is the first full mash with my shiny new mash tun and stainless pan this is my plan but please help if I've missed something
Heat 20 liters water to 75C
into mash tun (cool box)
Add grains and mash for 90 minutes
Drain and add another 15 liters of water at 80C
Drain into boiler
Boil for 90 minutes with hops
Cool and ferment in a bucket.
what do you think to that?
Looking forward to it.
wilf
- seymour
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Re: Scottish Heavy
That'll work. The McEwans strain is a strong fermentor, high-attenuating, with high alcohol tolerance, probably even more so than Nottingham, so no need to make any adjustments.wilfh wrote:...its going to have to be nottingham as that what's i've got...should I adjust the mash temp a bit to try and compensate for the yeast...
Sounds good. Have fun and keep us posted.
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Re: Scottish Heavy
thanks Seymor
The brew in on the boil now. my thermometer broke just as I got the mash water up to temperature so I had to wing it. I'm hoping that the mash is ok. Apart from that it is all going to plan.
Wilf
The brew in on the boil now. my thermometer broke just as I got the mash water up to temperature so I had to wing it. I'm hoping that the mash is ok. Apart from that it is all going to plan.
Wilf
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Re: Scottish Heavy
Too late for you now but for anyone else I currently have this in the keg and it is really good, a huge chewy, fruity, malty beer, low hopped so the malt really shines. Not a session beer but for sitting in front of the fire on a cold winters night it is to be thoroughly recommended.
25 litres
Kilt Lifter 80 shilling Ale
5.000 kg Pale Malt, Maris Otter (5.9 EBC) Grain 1 85.2 %
0.450 kg Crystal Malt (140.0 EBC) Grain 2 7.7 %
0.250 kg Wheat Malt (3.0 EBC) Grain 3 4.3 %
0.100 kg Brown Porter Malt Oak Kilned (550.0 EBC) Grain 4 1.7 %
0.070 kg Roasted Barley (1220.0 EBC) Grain 5 1.2 %
27.20 g Goldings, East Kent [7.20 %] - Boil 90.0 min Hop 6 22.2 IBUs
0.50 tsp Protafloc (Boil 15.0 mins) Fining 7 -
1.0 pkg Scottish Ale (Wyeast Labs #1728) [124.21 ml] Yeast
Mashed high at 69c for 60 minutes boil for 90.
25 litres
Kilt Lifter 80 shilling Ale
5.000 kg Pale Malt, Maris Otter (5.9 EBC) Grain 1 85.2 %
0.450 kg Crystal Malt (140.0 EBC) Grain 2 7.7 %
0.250 kg Wheat Malt (3.0 EBC) Grain 3 4.3 %
0.100 kg Brown Porter Malt Oak Kilned (550.0 EBC) Grain 4 1.7 %
0.070 kg Roasted Barley (1220.0 EBC) Grain 5 1.2 %
27.20 g Goldings, East Kent [7.20 %] - Boil 90.0 min Hop 6 22.2 IBUs
0.50 tsp Protafloc (Boil 15.0 mins) Fining 7 -
1.0 pkg Scottish Ale (Wyeast Labs #1728) [124.21 ml] Yeast
Mashed high at 69c for 60 minutes boil for 90.
I am "The Little Red Brooster"
Fermenting:
Conditioning:
Drinking: Southwold Again,
Up Next: John Barleycorn (Barley Wine)
Planning: Winter drinking Beer
Fermenting:
Conditioning:
Drinking: Southwold Again,
Up Next: John Barleycorn (Barley Wine)
Planning: Winter drinking Beer