yankinoz
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Australia offers a greater variety of honeys than anywhere I've been. Throw 500-1000g into a 20L batch of beer, and the flavour of the beer should vary greatly with the honey. I don't brew many, but others here may have experimented with different sorts.
A caution if anyone uses a honey beer recipe from a US or Canadian forum: unless otherwise stated, the honey is probably mostly from clover and decidedly on the mild side, even bland. If the recipe callsfor a large amount of honey and you're using flavourful Aussie honey, you might try a smaller addition. Orange blossom honey from Florida is also very mild, but perfumy. On the other hand, if a US recipe calls for buckwheat honey, that has a very strong flavor, more than, say, stringybark honey. The one commercial buckwheat honey beer I ever tried tasted highly medicinal. (Not to be confused with beer from malted buckwhweat, which can be very good)
A caution if anyone uses a honey beer recipe from a US or Canadian forum: unless otherwise stated, the honey is probably mostly from clover and decidedly on the mild side, even bland. If the recipe callsfor a large amount of honey and you're using flavourful Aussie honey, you might try a smaller addition. Orange blossom honey from Florida is also very mild, but perfumy. On the other hand, if a US recipe calls for buckwheat honey, that has a very strong flavor, more than, say, stringybark honey. The one commercial buckwheat honey beer I ever tried tasted highly medicinal. (Not to be confused with beer from malted buckwhweat, which can be very good)
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