so to get a super biscuity flavour off the biscuit malt that i do already
i am adding a kilo of Vienna malt to this one for that extra toasty flavour that Vienna gives so thought these would complement each other

'Tis a myth ==> http://www.livescience.com/7113-tongue- ... unked.htmlYeastWhisperer wrote: It is a perception that is sensed on the back of the tongue. Hop flavor is sensed on the front of the tongue (it's actually a combination of taste and smell).
No so much a myth as an oversimplification; however, iso-alpha bitterness is definitely perceived in the back of the mouth more than any other area of mouth. It lingers long after the other beer components have faded.oz11 wrote:'Tis a myth ==> http://www.livescience.com/7113-tongue- ... unked.htmlYeastWhisperer wrote: It is a perception that is sensed on the back of the tongue. Hop flavor is sensed on the front of the tongue (it's actually a combination of taste and smell).
I would not pay attention to claimed bitterness levels on many American ales. The claimed bitterness levels of today are like audio amplifier wattage and THD ratings in the seventies (one beer claims to have 300 IBUs of bitterness). Even the hardcore hop heads out there will not drink a 90 IBU beer unless it has a huge malt backbone to offset the bitterness, and brewers cannot afford to brew beer that only sells to very select group of customers in a market that only represents 8% over the overall beer market in the United States.. Brewing in the United States has become a stunt. Craft Breweries are treating huge late additions as if they were added at the beginning of the boil. It's all marketing.NobbyIPA wrote:yup my zero hops are always seeped held at 80c for 20 30 mins
the IBU's are planned to be 60ish as 50 or below is the norm for me and just want a wee more bitterness to this brew as i tasted some 90+IBU highly hopped American ales
90 min
30
10
zero works well for me
An expected F.G. of 1.011 seems about right for that mash temperature with Bry 96 (which originally came from the last standing industrial-scale ale brewery on the East Coast). I seem to get a point or two more attenuation than most people because I mostly use cultured yeast that I grow from slant (slope); therefore, I usually mash-in at 68C.NobbyIPA wrote:Mash on at 66 c