This is a brew of the Hop Back Brewery Entire Stout. The recipe has been taken (and ammended) from the Hop and Grain online recipe database. The original recipe can be found in their Stout section.
The recipe has had the Black Malt and Carafa Special 3* added. The Black Malt was originally added to bring the colour up to 170EBC, but then we found the small bag of CS3 in the box and chucked that in too. This brought the colour up to 192EBC.
* A note on the Carafa Special 3 from the Hop and Grape brew shop website
Adds aroma. colour & body, with a milder, smoother flavour than achieved with husk-on. For use in Dark Beer; Salvator Bockbier; Stouts; Porters; Alt beer; Bockbier; Schwarzbier. Max. 5% 1200 E.B.C.
Grain & Fermentables
- Pale Malt, 3840g
- Chocolate Malt, 160g
- Roasted Barley, 160g
- Crystal Malt, 160g
- Black Malt, 90g
- Carafa Special 3, 45g
- Gypsum, 1tsp
- Epsom Salts, 1/2tsp
Hops & Copper Finings
- Challenger, 30g for 90mins
- East Kent Goldings, 20g for last 15mins
- Protafloc, 1 tablet last 15mins
Brew Details
- Brew Day: 20th January 2010
- Transfered to Secondary: 28th February 2010
- Bottled: 10th March 2010 (~23 litres)
- Yeast: Safale S-04
- Brew Length: 23 litres
- Mash Time: 90 minutes @ 66°C
- Water-to-Grain Ratio (L:Kg) : 2:1
- Boil Time: 90 minutes
- OG - Recipe/Achieved: 1.043 / 1.041
- FG - Recipe/Achieved: 1.013 / 1.011
- ABV - Recipe/Achieved: 3.9% / 4%
- EBU/EBC: 33/192
- Priming: None
We use Graham Wheeler's Beer Engine software for capturing the recipe. Here's the custom recipe file for this brew.
Pictures
The grain, Pale Malt underneath then from the top, clockwise: Dark Malt, Crystal Malt, Roasted Barley, Carafa Special 3 and Chocolate Malt. The Gypsum and Epsom Salts are in the middle.
The mash - it was looking dark from the offset:
Very dark indeed:
The mash was done in the evening, drained out and the wort was left overnight before starting the boil. It was wrapped in the red insulation jacket and amazingly it was still at 54°C over 12 hours later.
Here are the hops waiting while the wort comes up to the boil - Challenger on the left and the EKG on the right - the Challengers go in for the full boil:
Post boil gravity not too far off the target:
More pictures here.
Dave & Suki.
We thought we'd try something different and try a honey beer.
The recipe for this honey beer is taken from The Home Brew Forums. You have to be a member to log in to their recipes area. The recipe is called BuzzBee Bitter and was created by eskimobob. We have pretty much followed that recipe. The recipe was originally for 19 litres, so we've converted the amounts slightly to match our 23 litre brew length.
Grain & Fermentables
- Pale Malt, 3270g
- Chocolate Malt, 120g
- Honey*, 1089g
- Gypsum, 1tsp
- Epsom Salts, 1/2tsp
* The comment regarding the honey on the original recipe is as follows:
Boil the honey separately in 1 litre of water then add straight to the fermenter on top of the cooled wort.
Hops & Copper Finings
- East Kent Goldings, 19g for last 60mins
- Fuggle, 28g for last 60mins
- Protafloc, 1 tablet last 15mins
Brew Details
- Brew Day: 14th February 2010
- Transfered to Secondary: 22nd February 2010
- Bottled: 28th February (42 Bottles)
- Yeast: Safale S-04
- Brew Length: 23 litres
- Mash Time: 90 minutes @ 65°C
- Water-to-Grain Ratio (L:Kg) : 3.2:1
- Boil Time: 90 minutes
- OG - Recipe/Achieved: 1.051 / 1.044 with honey, 1.034 without
- FG - Recipe/Achieved: 1.014 / 1.009 (in to secondary)
- ABV - Recipe/Achieved: 4.9% / 4.5% (maybe)
- EBU/EBC: 26/47
- Priming: 75g granulated sugar mixed with 250ml of wort, boiled and stirred in before bottling
We use Graham Wheeler's Beer Engine software for capturing the recipe. Here's the custom recipe file for this brew.
Pictures
We seem to be unable to take the right photos, so there are no photos of the grain.
The 3.2:1 water:grain ratio produced a really watery mash. We're not sure how the original recipe got to its OG:
The hops awaiting their turn - EKGs on the left:
And they didn't have to wait long. The hops went in just after the chiller:
If you've ever wondered what 1.1kg of honey looks like, well here's your answer. The second picture is the honey and 1 litre of water coming up to temperature:
And here's the honey mix in the bottom of the FV waiting for the wort to be transferred from the boiler:
More pictures here.
Dave & Suki.
The recipe for this clone of the Sierra Nevada American Pale Ale is taken from The Home Brew Forums. You have to be a member to log in to their recipes area. The recipe was originally for 25 litres, so we've converted the amounts slightly to match our 23 litre brew length.
Grain & Fermentables
- Pale Malt, 5300g
- Pale Crystal Malt, 280g
- Gypsum, 1tsp
- Epsom Salts, 1/2tsp
Hops & Copper Finings
- Magnum, 15g for 90mins
- Magnum, 10g for last 30mins
- Cascade, 50g for last 15mins
- Cascade, 25g steeped for 30mins post-boil while wort cools from 80°C
- Protafloc, 1 tablet last 15mins
Brew Details
- Brew Day: 17th January 2010
- Transfered to Secondary: 24th January 2010
- Bottled: 3rd February 2010 (44 Bottles)
- Yeast: Safale US-05
- Brew Length: 23 litres
- Mash Time: 90 minutes @ 67°C
- Water-to-Grain Ratio: 2:1
- Boil Time: 90 minutes
- OG - Recipe/Achieved: 1.054 / 1.052
- FG - Recipe/Achieved: 1.014 / 1.011
- ABV - Recipe/Achieved: 5.4% / 5.3%
- EBU/EBC: 54/14
- Priming: 82g granulated sugar mixed with 250ml of wort, boiled and stirred in before bottling
We use Graham Wheeler's Beer Engine software for capturing the recipe. Here's the custom recipe file for this brew.
Pictures
The grain and salts waiting for the mash tun to get to strike temperature:
The eager assistant:
The customary shot of the mash tun tucked up in its jacket:
The mash tun during the run-off from the first batch:
One batch of the many hops to go in, and the steeped hops just after the chiller was turned on:
The hop debris, post drain-off; there's two heating elements in there somewhere!
With all the excitement of the 4 batches of hops, we forgot the protafloc :( It's hasn't cleared down as much as it might have done had the protafloc been remembered - as illustrated by the murky trial jar during bottling.
More pictures here.
Dave & Suki.