pint of lager
brewing on the verandah
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I recieved a PM the other day from a brewer who has recently moved to AG, and he was after some recipes for clones for some of the premium commercial lagers from Europe. He is thinking of buying one of the Clone Recipe books. Was going to send a PM back, but thought that I would post here.
There are two problems, where to source recipes from and where to source ingredients from.
Cloning a brew is one path that brewers go down. They spend alot of time comparing their brews to a commercial style and refining their recipe so that the end result closely matches the commercial brew. This requires alot of skill. Sometimes, books provide a starting point for recipes, but often, the ingredients specified are unavailable in Australia. To clone a brew 100%, you would need access to the original commercial recipe, ingredients and the skill to put them together. An easier path is to decide what style a particular beer is, then to brew to that style.
Sourcing recipes can be tricky. Obviously, the ones here on AHB use ingredients readily available and also use metric measurements. Some of the web recipes don't specify if they are US or imperial gallons which makes a big difference. US 5 gallons works out to be 19 litres, which will mean your recipe is wrong to start with if you mix them up. Recipes that don't specify IBU, just a quantity of hops with no AA% are also dodgy. Some recipes are obviously fantasy recipes, with no tasting or brewing notes. Recipes that specify grain grist as a % and hops additions as IBU's are easier to use. Recipes that have huge brewing software printouts are a waste of space.
If you are reading a recipe off the web, it can be hard to gauge the brewer's experience. Brewing notes that have comments like, "This is the third time I have brewed and refined this recipe, next time will back the roast back just a little more and up the flavour hops," mean alot. Recipes with no comments are not helpful. Recipes that have not been tasted, just brewed are not very helpful either. If you are adding your recipe to a database, make sure if it is based on someone else's recipe you acknowledge it.
An excellent source of recipes are the Vicbrew booklets. These include the recipes that have placed in their categories, judges tasting notes and also helpful brewing information. Available from Grain and Grape. The years where Victoria host the Nationals also include the recipes from that comp. Many kit and kilo recipes do place in these comps and are included.
Rather than buying a clone style recipe book, I think money would be better spent on a decent brewing book, such as Noonan's "New Brewing Lagers" which includes ale brewing information.
Recipes are only part of the equation to a great brew. The major component is the skill of the brewer. You can have the best gear and ingredients, refractometer, pH meter, Promash, beersmith but if you cannot put it all together, your beer will be hazy, out of balance and turn into bottlebombs.
There are two problems, where to source recipes from and where to source ingredients from.
Cloning a brew is one path that brewers go down. They spend alot of time comparing their brews to a commercial style and refining their recipe so that the end result closely matches the commercial brew. This requires alot of skill. Sometimes, books provide a starting point for recipes, but often, the ingredients specified are unavailable in Australia. To clone a brew 100%, you would need access to the original commercial recipe, ingredients and the skill to put them together. An easier path is to decide what style a particular beer is, then to brew to that style.
Sourcing recipes can be tricky. Obviously, the ones here on AHB use ingredients readily available and also use metric measurements. Some of the web recipes don't specify if they are US or imperial gallons which makes a big difference. US 5 gallons works out to be 19 litres, which will mean your recipe is wrong to start with if you mix them up. Recipes that don't specify IBU, just a quantity of hops with no AA% are also dodgy. Some recipes are obviously fantasy recipes, with no tasting or brewing notes. Recipes that specify grain grist as a % and hops additions as IBU's are easier to use. Recipes that have huge brewing software printouts are a waste of space.
If you are reading a recipe off the web, it can be hard to gauge the brewer's experience. Brewing notes that have comments like, "This is the third time I have brewed and refined this recipe, next time will back the roast back just a little more and up the flavour hops," mean alot. Recipes with no comments are not helpful. Recipes that have not been tasted, just brewed are not very helpful either. If you are adding your recipe to a database, make sure if it is based on someone else's recipe you acknowledge it.
An excellent source of recipes are the Vicbrew booklets. These include the recipes that have placed in their categories, judges tasting notes and also helpful brewing information. Available from Grain and Grape. The years where Victoria host the Nationals also include the recipes from that comp. Many kit and kilo recipes do place in these comps and are included.
Rather than buying a clone style recipe book, I think money would be better spent on a decent brewing book, such as Noonan's "New Brewing Lagers" which includes ale brewing information.
Recipes are only part of the equation to a great brew. The major component is the skill of the brewer. You can have the best gear and ingredients, refractometer, pH meter, Promash, beersmith but if you cannot put it all together, your beer will be hazy, out of balance and turn into bottlebombs.