Matthopperman
Active Member
Hi all,
About a decade or more ago I was in a pub and they had a brown ale on tap which from my best recollection was brewed by Howler, but it obviously is long since gone and no trace of it exists on their website or Google or anything. Is there a chance anyone here remembers that beer?
Alternatively, perhaps anyone could give me some recommendations on a commercial style similar or how I'd go about brewing it. The way I'd describe it was that it was served ice cold (as opposed to cellar temps typically recommended), quite crisp and dry, and had a very distinct brown sugar sweetness. Not necessarily from brown sugar as an adjucnt, likely just some caramel malts in there. Colour was nice on the lighter end. Can't remember/didn't have the beer tasting skills back then to know how to describe bitterness/hop aroma or esters.
I've had a few browns since trying to chase the taste of it, but none has hit the spot even close. They either have hop levels which overwhelm any slight sweetness, therefore just tasting more like a brown-coloured IPA, or are overly dark and cloying (more the style you'd expect at cellar temps rather than a nice draft beer you can have in summer), or more bitter and bready/toasty rather than toffee/brown sugar sweetness.
I haven't been able to track down a Newcastle Brown or a Mornington brown ale yet to see if they're along the lines of what I'd like, but maybe they could hit the spot?
In terms of brewing I'm thinking something like (for a partial mash:
- 1.5 kg Maris Otte LME
- 2 kg Maris Otter
- 225g Crystal Dark
- 225g Victory Malt
- 80g Special B
- 60g Chocolate Malt
With just some fuggles to hit 22 IBU, and perhaps even just Safale-05 for something maybe drier and less fruity than Safale-04.
Thanks
About a decade or more ago I was in a pub and they had a brown ale on tap which from my best recollection was brewed by Howler, but it obviously is long since gone and no trace of it exists on their website or Google or anything. Is there a chance anyone here remembers that beer?
Alternatively, perhaps anyone could give me some recommendations on a commercial style similar or how I'd go about brewing it. The way I'd describe it was that it was served ice cold (as opposed to cellar temps typically recommended), quite crisp and dry, and had a very distinct brown sugar sweetness. Not necessarily from brown sugar as an adjucnt, likely just some caramel malts in there. Colour was nice on the lighter end. Can't remember/didn't have the beer tasting skills back then to know how to describe bitterness/hop aroma or esters.
I've had a few browns since trying to chase the taste of it, but none has hit the spot even close. They either have hop levels which overwhelm any slight sweetness, therefore just tasting more like a brown-coloured IPA, or are overly dark and cloying (more the style you'd expect at cellar temps rather than a nice draft beer you can have in summer), or more bitter and bready/toasty rather than toffee/brown sugar sweetness.
I haven't been able to track down a Newcastle Brown or a Mornington brown ale yet to see if they're along the lines of what I'd like, but maybe they could hit the spot?
In terms of brewing I'm thinking something like (for a partial mash:
- 1.5 kg Maris Otte LME
- 2 kg Maris Otter
- 225g Crystal Dark
- 225g Victory Malt
- 80g Special B
- 60g Chocolate Malt
With just some fuggles to hit 22 IBU, and perhaps even just Safale-05 for something maybe drier and less fruity than Safale-04.
Thanks