I've had dark Irish ales similar to this, but it doesn't strike me as very mild-ish.
Crouchvale Blackwater Mild
Pale Malt: 94.7%
Roasted Barley: 5.3%
Crouchvale Blackwater Mild
Pale Malt: 94.7%
Roasted Barley: 5.3%
That does sound very good. It looks very similar to this one in our list, which incidentally won the 2009 Ameican Homebrewers Association National Homebrew Competition Gold Medal. I wonder if you saw that magazine article and adjusted it a little based on your grains at hand, or something?orlando wrote:Interesting thread and shows, for me at least, the fluidity within style boundaries. I have only just started brewing Milds and was interested in old fashioned versions as modern ones didn't appear to compare well with the past so went looking for a more appropriate recipe. This is where the plot thickens, the one I brewed, outlined below, is what I came up with but for the life of me I've forgotten exactly where I got it from but think it was an old Durden Park beer circle recipe. I've tried searching for it again but have so far come up blank. I would love to know if anyone recognises it. The reason I'm so keen to know is because it is so good, one of the best beers I've brewed and so tasty each pint lasts way too short a time, so am grateful it is relatively weak in alcohol. The use of brown porter malt has added a wonderful layer of texture and aroma to it and is in effect its secret.
3.000 kg Pale Malt, Maris Otter (5.9 EBC) 73.2 %
0.500 kg Crystal Malt (150.0 EBC) 12.2 %
0.225 kg Chocolate Malt (800.0 EBC) 5.5 %
0.200 kg Brown Porter Malt (1700s style) (85.0 EBC) 4.9 %
0.100 kg Special B Malt (354.6 EBC) 2.4 %
0.075 kg Carafa II (811.6 EBC) 1.8 %
40.00 g Fuggles [3.85 %] - Boil 60.0 min 16.8 IBUs
15.00 g Fuggles [3.85 %] - Aroma Steep 0.0 min 0.0 IBUs
Jake and Tom Modest Mild (Zymurgy Magazine 2009)
Pale Malt: 65.9%
Brown Malt: 3%
CaraMunich Malt: 12%
Chocolate Malt: 3.3%
Dark Crystal Malt: 3.3%
Special B Malt: 1.7%
Carafa II Malt: .8%
You're right, your recipe uses 4.87% Brown Porter Malt, and this modern one uses only 3% Brown Malt, but in most cases those are different names for the same thing.orlando wrote:No, I don't think so it was pretty much an old fashioned mild which specifically used brown porter malt. Thanks for looking though. Just wish you could taste it as I need some feedback on it. I will take it to my local CBA meeting Jan 5th and see what the fellow members think. I've got the 4 way SMaSH I did with the different dried yeasts so a lot of feedback coming my way.
So, how did the meeting go? I'd love to hear some of the feedback you received.orlando wrote:No, I don't think so it was pretty much an old fashioned mild which specifically used brown porter malt. Thanks for looking though. Just wish you could taste it as I need some feedback on it. I will take it to my local CBA meeting Jan 5th and see what the fellow members think. I've got the 4 way SMaSH I did with the different dried yeasts so a lot of feedback coming my way.
I get the cask claim. What doesn't taste better that way, right?barney wrote:I have learned to brew more than I think I need, it always goes bloody quick. Its also far better on cask or from the corny than from a bottle.