Simple stout recipe

Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum

Help Support Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Hangover68

Well-Known Member
Joined
12/7/17
Messages
655
Reaction score
224
Location
St Helena, Melbourne NE.
Ok so i want to brew a stout before it gets much warmer, below is what i have on hand if someone can suggest a ratio ? - 23l batch BIAB process.

ale - 20kg
wheat- 1.85kg
light chocolate 850g
pilsner 600g
vienna 4.5kg
acidulated 850g

S04 yeast
various hops that i will use whatever is suitable
 
Ok so i want to brew a stout before it gets much warmer, below is what i have on hand if someone can suggest a ratio ? - 23l batch BIAB process.

ale - 20kg
wheat- 1.85kg
light chocolate 850g
pilsner 600g
vienna 4.5kg
acidulated 850g

S04 yeast
various hops that i will use whatever is suitable
You are going to need some roast, crystal and some flaked barley in the mix, yeast and base malt is OK.
I am enjoying this one at the moment.
https://byo.com/article/irish-extra-stout/
 
You could try roasting your own malt.. You wont get an exact EBC but it will darken and flavour your beer.. You can also use some rolled oats or quick oats to add some body and mouth feel..
 
Simple dry Irish stout:

90% really good ale malt (e.g. Floor malted Thomas Fawcett's Maris Otter)
5% Roast barley
5% Flaked barley

Fuggles (or any hop that provides smooth bitterness and is from the UK) to 40 IBU

A neutral ale yeast. Wyeast Irish Ale or similar. Nottingham goes well for dry. SO4 should work well.

That's it!

So, why is this good? It's pretty much Guinness, more or less. I personally think stouts really benefit from a solid, flavourful base malt, so that's why that's in there. Still works with any old base malt of course, just not as tasty IMHO.

Now Guinness do one extra thing: they add a bit of lactic soured, double strength stout back into the brew to give it a tang - different portions in different markets (or at least they used to - its all a bit dumbed down now.)

I achieve this by going and buying half a dozen Guinness stubbies (NOT cans - the 6% ones). The day before I open 2 stubbies, pour into a clean ice cream container and throw in a handful of crushed ale malt. The little lactose guys that live on the grain husk go to work. On brew day, strain the solids out and add the soured liquid to the boil for the last 15 minutes.

Or you can just add some lactic acid to taste once its completed. That's probably safer, but I'm a mash basher. I get a bit of variation using my approach, but so does fine wine and I'm okay with that. The beer is always great, but sometimes its sensational. YMMV

Think I'll go and have a stout now. That's what the other four stubbies are for.
 
All good ideas but was looking to use what i have, i've been using Ian's BIAB spreadsheet which has worked well for my other brews.
Well the ratio wouldn't help because you don't have the ingredients for a stout. You can't just add chocolate malt and call it stout.

Perhaps try brewing something else, using up the dregs of the pilsner malt, bulk with the ale malt and use maybe 10% Vienna.

Can't suggest a recipe with what you have if you're not going to supplement with the required ingerdients.
 
Kadmium's right. Won't be a stout. Using what you have, the closest you'll probably get is a version of stout's older brother, porter.

Assuming 5 kg total grist for @23L

40% Ale
43% Vienna
17% Light chocolate

Brewfather gives me 89 EBC, so plenty dark. IBUs around 37 would work. Nobody really knows what porter is anyway, so you can do whatever you like.

Good luck.
 
Are you willing to roast your own grain? Its not hard, and you can do it in a pan or oven. If you are I can convert a stout recipe for you.

If your not willing to experiment and try something new then your stuff out of luck with what you got
 
I reckon @chefeffect has a pretty good idea there.

In all reality though it still won't be stout. Roast barley is critical to a stout. And roast barley is roasted UNMALTED barley.

But I'm all in favour of being creative and walking your own path. Go nuts.
 
Yeah agree. I would just make a frankenbier using Vienna, use up the pilsner, and add like 3% choc for a nice coppery colour. Then do it as an ale, with either English hops as a bitter beer, or a hoppy ale.
 
Ok so i want to brew a stout before it gets much warmer, below is what i have on hand if someone can suggest a ratio ? - 23l batch BIAB process.

ale - 20kg
wheat- 1.85kg
light chocolate 850g
pilsner 600g
vienna 4.5kg
acidulated 850g

S04 yeast
various hops that i will use whatever is suitable
you could do a porteresque without the roast barley, but you really need the rolled barley to get the creamy mouthfeel going.
i do a simple dry irish similar to mashbasher above, but generally ratio of roast barley 1:2 rolled barley, as often as not without any crystal (2 different outcomes here), (probably 35% of my brews are stout, or leaning to porter)
but as per kadmium, you don't have the basic ingredients for a stout.
bit like having a kilo of flour and wanting to make toffee.
 
Just throw a shit load of hops in it, add s kilo of uncle Toby's oats and call it a Chocolate NEIPA
 
Just smashed about 2 kilos of Korean chicken and rice, and about 11 billion beers after refinishing the deck. Fark that.
 
Kadmium's right. Won't be a stout. Using what you have, the closest you'll probably get is a version of stout's older brother, porter.

Assuming 5 kg total grist for @23L

40% Ale
43% Vienna
17% Light chocolate

Brewfather gives me 89 EBC, so plenty dark. IBUs around 37 would work. Nobody really knows what porter is anyway, so you can do whatever you like.

Good luck.
baltic porter can go to amber colour in historical porters (class 9c), i made one once with no choc, plenty of aromatics, special B, crystal, vienna etc etc - a real kitchen cupboard job.
pale amber colour, in my 'classic archives' file of the best i've made.
 
I reckon @chefeffect has a pretty good idea there.

In all reality though it still won't be stout. Roast barley is critical to a stout. And roast barley is roasted UNMALTED barley.

But I'm all in favour of being creative and walking your own path. Go nuts.

Cheers MashBasher!

MOST stouts use roasted barley, but black patent can be used for stout also. Brewing classic beer styles 'Triple-X' and Burton Bridge 'Top Dog Stout' dont use roasted barley.

You can use oats to get the mouth feel.
 
baltic porter can go to amber colour in historical porters (class 9c), i made one once with no choc, plenty of aromatics, special B, crystal, vienna etc etc - a real kitchen cupboard job.
pale amber colour, in my 'classic archives' file of the best i've made.

I read a recipe today for "white stout". Fark me.

I mean, I like Americans as much as anyone else does. But the needless reinvention, fads and fashionista spinny-spinny-spinny bullshit that their market is foisting on the beer-brewing world is mind-boggling. I am waiting for NAMBI to be a thing (that's North African Millet Beer for Idiots). Followed by PAMBI (Pissed Americans Making Bullshit Institutional).
 
Last edited:

Latest posts

Back
Top