Brewmerang
Active Member
Recently I have been experimenting with hops driven fruity flavours (no fruit) in blonde ales. I have achieved mango, passionfruit, apple, pear, lychie, rockmelon and honeydew flavours.
This latest brew was supposed to be a mango forward flavour.
I wanted to create a drier beer, so what I did differently was:
1/ The use of dry alpha amylase in the mash.
2/ The addition of some dextrose and DME to the boil.
The beer has a very fruity aroma, but a distinct tawny port flavour. It is not an offensive flavour, it's nice, just not what you would expect of a beer. I have never experienced this before.
Could it be tannins? Could it be infection? Has anyone else experienced this?
Here is the recipe.
This latest brew was supposed to be a mango forward flavour.
I wanted to create a drier beer, so what I did differently was:
1/ The use of dry alpha amylase in the mash.
2/ The addition of some dextrose and DME to the boil.
The beer has a very fruity aroma, but a distinct tawny port flavour. It is not an offensive flavour, it's nice, just not what you would expect of a beer. I have never experienced this before.
Could it be tannins? Could it be infection? Has anyone else experienced this?
Here is the recipe.
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