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| Home -> [Beverages, Scottish, Western European] -> [Scottish brown ale Recipe] |
Scottish brown ale
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| Artist: |
_ |
Yield: |
1 |
| Categories: |
Beverages, Scottish, Western European |
Rating: |
0 |
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Ingredients:
| 4 1/2
| lbs | Light Dry Malt, 2.1 k | | 8
| oz | Crystal Malt, 227 grams | | 2
| oz | Munich Malt, 57 grams | | 3 1/2
| oz | Crushed Chocolate Malt, add | | | -to mash, 99 grams | | 8
| oz | Dark brown sugar, 227 g | | 4
| oz | 100% Dextrin Powder, 113 g | | 1/2
| tsp | Gypsum | | 3/4
| tsp | -Salt | | 2
| oz | Bittering hops, Fuggle or | | | -Willamette, 57 grams | | 1
| oz | Aromatic hops, Northern | | | -Brewer dry hops , 28 g | | | -Water to 5 US gallons | | | -or 19 litres water | | 3/4
| cup | Corn sugar, for primimg | | 1/2
| oz | Ale yeast, 14 grams |
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Procedures:
| 1 | Starting specific gravity: 1.047°Final specific gravity: 1.015 alcohol by vol 5% if your recipe contains munich or crystal malt, place the cracked or ground grain in a kitchen pan, cover with water, heat to approximately 150f (66 c), cover & let stand (either on the stove top or in the oven) 45 minutes to 1 hour before you"re actually ready to start to work. | | 2 | Place a colander over your boiling kettle (pot) & pour in the grain, letting the water collect in the pot below. | | 3 | Rinse through the grain with hot water, at least 130 °F (54 c) but no hotter than 170f (77 c) until a clear runoff is obtained. | | 4 | Discard the grain. | | 5 | The liquid becomes part of the boil. | | 6 | Thoroughly dissolve the following; dry malt, any sugar except the priming sugar (used for bottling), dextrin powder, gypsum and salt in two or more gallons of water (as much as possible). | | 7 | Heat to a rolling boil. | | 8 | Stir in the bittering hops along with the chocolate malt and boil 30 minutes more, adding aromatic hops during the last two minutes. | | 9 | (if you are using hop pellets, you may "dry hop", adding the pellets to the fermenter just proir to fermentation instead of putting them in the boiling kettle). | | 10 | At the end of the boil, the wort should be cooled as quickly as possible to a temperature between 70 and 85 °F (21-27 c), so the yeast can be added.(if you wish measure starting specific gravity) fermentation: siphon your cooled wort into one or more sanitized glass jugs (or fermentors), filling no more than 2/3 full. | | 11 | (anne"s note the total amount of liquid should be 5 american gallons). | | 12 | Add the yeast, attach a airlock to each container and allow fermentation to proceed. | | 13 | In 5 to 7 days, when apparent yeast activity has ceased and it taste like dry, flat beer, you are ready to bottle. | | 14 | Siphon beer carefully into secondary container, do not disturb sediment. | | 15 | (anne"s note: if this is done twice, the second time a day or so later, there will be almost no sediment in the beer). | | 16 | Boil priming sugar and stir in carefully. | | 17 | Siphon primed beer into clean bottles and cap (allow some headspace). | | 18 | Check ales after week or two. | | 19 | (we"ve found that they are most drinkable after 3 weeks). | | 20 | Makes: 5 us gallon |
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