hi folks,
I'm brewing this tomorrow and wondering if anyone has done it, or has tips.
Like some previous brew dog recipes I've done, the SRM and IBU in Beer Smith are about half what Brew Dog calculates. I found this recipe on Beer Smith, which had some notes claiming brew dog say they could achieve higher SRM and IBU with its ingredient suppliers than homebrewers could. Not sure I see how they could get double the numbers though. There was also a comment that over 40 SRM is not noticeable anyway.
I've usually upped the hops and not cared about colour, but would like a nice black stout. From googling, I found one guy saying they used the recipe as is and was happy, while another added cold steeped Carafa III for extra colour. I thought I might add 100g or so of that to bump me over 40 SRM. Not sure whether to double one or both of the hops (Sorachi I'm guessing is a 20m addition).
On the lactose front, I think the commercial version is just right in terms of sweetness. But I have had another commercial milk stout which has the same percentage of lactose and seems too sweet. But guess it's the other malts at play which effect final sweetness.
Any thoughts or tips?
Cheers,
B
I'm brewing this tomorrow and wondering if anyone has done it, or has tips.
Like some previous brew dog recipes I've done, the SRM and IBU in Beer Smith are about half what Brew Dog calculates. I found this recipe on Beer Smith, which had some notes claiming brew dog say they could achieve higher SRM and IBU with its ingredient suppliers than homebrewers could. Not sure I see how they could get double the numbers though. There was also a comment that over 40 SRM is not noticeable anyway.
I've usually upped the hops and not cared about colour, but would like a nice black stout. From googling, I found one guy saying they used the recipe as is and was happy, while another added cold steeped Carafa III for extra colour. I thought I might add 100g or so of that to bump me over 40 SRM. Not sure whether to double one or both of the hops (Sorachi I'm guessing is a 20m addition).
On the lactose front, I think the commercial version is just right in terms of sweetness. But I have had another commercial milk stout which has the same percentage of lactose and seems too sweet. But guess it's the other malts at play which effect final sweetness.
Any thoughts or tips?
Cheers,
B