It was time to brew our Amber Ale once more, as our supply had run out - how’d that happen? We decided to beef it up with a bit more crystal malt (even though the wife liked it perfectly well as it was), as well as increasing the batch size to allow us to spin off 4L for a trial batch (more on that later*). First the style guidelines:
Amber Ale
Flavor – plenty of caramel malt, delicate hop finish
Aroma – clean caramel malt with a hint of floral hops
Balance – malty to somewhat hoppy
Seasonality – year round
Pair with – wide range of food, chicken, seafood, burgers, spicy cuisine
Gravity – 1.048 – 1.058
Alcohol – 4.5 – 6%
Body – medium
Colour – 11 – 18*SRM, pale to dark amber
Bitterness - 30 – 40 IBU medium
Recipe
TinRoof Amber Ale2.0
27L SG 1.058
6kg pale malt 80%
1kg crystal 60 (pale to medium) 13.33%
0.5kg quick oats 6.67%
3gm calcium carbonate
1gm calcium sulfate
90 min mash at 66*c
60 min boil
60 min - 30gm Boadicea 10%AA =27 IBU
30 min – 30gm Hallertau 4.7%AA = 10 IBU
Total = 37 IBU
Yeast – Safale US-05, made into a starter over 2 days
*TinRoof Almond Ale
After cooling the Amber Ale above, we split off 4L of the wort into a glass fermenter. Then we added 200gm of sliced almonds (previously roasted and then soaked in boiling water till they cooled), hoping to infuse a subtle almond flavor into our Amber Ale. It looks pretty cool in the fermenter with the almonds flying around everywhere due to the convection currents, I just hope we get a good almond taste out of it.
1 comment:
Hi Guys,
Have you considered getting that wonderful almond taste by using a single drop of bitter almond essence?
I use a drop from the tiny vials in a cake to fill it with almondy goodness. I think you can get it from some delis its quite expensive, not poisonous and yummy! but be careful as it is very strong.
Love the blog
Ally
Post a Comment