My previous efforts with (wet?) yeast have been disastrous. One was infected and both were phenolic. These were both early brews and I thought I might venture out again, hoping my technique had improved.
I wanted a dark chocolaty mild. This time I wanted to use no crystal malt, even though I think people are unnecessarily afraid of crystal malt, especially in a beer like a mild where you want it to be a bit smooth and caramely, but this I wanted to be a bit more authentic, and consulting Ron Pattinson's "Homebrewer's Guide to Vintage Beer" noticed that a lot of historic milds had no crystal at all. What they often did have was sugar syrup. Here I am using invert number three, home made, by heating demerara sugar in a pan with a little lemon juice at 115-120 deg c for 150 -210 minutes-ish. I used the oven so I didn't have to constantly monitor the temperature, but this probably means my temperatures were all over the place. Nonetheless a good dark syrup was obtained.
Because It was a dark beer, my water was probably fine, so I didn't fuss about water treatment for this one.
Recipe
The recipe was 20% invert syrup #3 (entered as sugar and adjusted for water weight), 5% chocolate malt and 75% pale (Crisp, flagon). I also added 10g of black malt in 10L just to darken a little more (not part of the percentages).The hops were 12g of perle at 8.4 % aa at 60-mins for 23IBU-ish. The beer was no chilled overnight and the yeast was pitched direct. Original gravity was 1.036.
Tasting
The beer (shown below) was bottle conditioned to 1.8 vols Co2. The fist flavour is dark malt, just a little acrid, and perhaps pushing towards (not quite) porter territory. Then there is a slight watery element with a hint of rummy-ness. Quite a complex malt character with roast, sweet at tip of tongue and dry and watery at the back. The low carbonation is nice. The beer is a few shades darker than coke, and is almost opaque but when held to the light it can bee seen to be clear.
The yeast was expressive, but had a slight twang that I associate with the slurry at the bottom of the fermenter. I might need to start oxygenating my wort a bit more since this is unnecessary with dry yeast, but could be a problem with my no chill process, with limited shaking after transferring hot wort to the fermenter.
A nice but unremarkable beer. I have noticed however,that these slightly boring dark milds definitely get finished the fastest. The low abv, low carbonation and non challenging flavour all contribute to this. It just seems hard to get bored of something boring? Next time I might try and sacrifice some clarity for a little more body by adding oats or something.
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