Tale of 3 Chocolates

Information about Grains and how to use them

Moderators: BlackDuck, Beer-lord, LouieMacGoo, philm00x, gwcr

Post Reply
Banjo-guy
Braumeister
Braumeister
Posts: 811
Joined: Tue Aug 06, 2013 8:30 am

Tale of 3 Chocolates

Post by Banjo-guy »

AF50F56C-4258-4972-9D50-319B91EDDD5F.jpeg
AF50F56C-4258-4972-9D50-319B91EDDD5F.jpeg (11.3 KiB) Viewed 2061 times
I’m always annoyed when trying to brew someone else’s recipe and the grains are not specifically listed. I think the dark malts in particular are frequently not specified. I would like to see the Lovibond at least.

I’m working on my Oatmeal Stout and hope to enter it into in the NHC. One recipe that I’ve seen lists Pale chocolate. I would like to finally learn how to interpret recipes with dark grains and to see if I can even tell the difference between the various chocolates.

Here are three different chocolates. Crisp L220, Baird’s L 450-550, and Briess L350. (English,English,American)

I’d be interested in any advice or experiences with these.
Banjo-guy
Braumeister
Braumeister
Posts: 811
Joined: Tue Aug 06, 2013 8:30 am

Re: Tale of 3 Chocolates

Post by Banjo-guy »

Sorry about the fuzziness of the photo. I had to reduce it it to a small file.
User avatar
RickBeer
Brew Guru
Brew Guru
Posts: 3099
Joined: Thu Aug 08, 2013 1:21 pm
Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan (Go Blue!)

Re: Tale of 3 Chocolates

Post by RickBeer »

And the answer is: A) William Crisp Pale Chocolate (although I cannot read your labels).

"Pale Chocolate" is to 200 - 250. It's roughly 1/2 what Chocolate is, and always says PALE on the label.

You get less "burnt" and more coffee, cocoa and chocolate. Not in my mind what goes in an Oatmeal Stout, I use Pale in my clone of MooseDrool. My Oatmeal Stout has flaked oats, roasted barley, and chocolate, as well as caramel 120. But that doesn't mean you cannot use pale chocolate.

If you want to tell the difference, pop a few kernels of each in your mouth, you'll quickly figure out which is pale vs. regular.
I have over 9,000 posts on "another forum", which means absolutely nothing. Mr. Beer January 2014 Brewer of the Month with all the pomp and circumstance that comes with it...

Certificate in Brewing and Distillation Technology

Sites to find beer making supplies: Adventures in Homebrewing - Mr. Beer - MoreBeer
My Beer - click to reveal
Currently using 6 LBKs.

Beers I regularly brew:
Bell's Best Brown clone
Irish Hills Red - I call this "Ann Arbor Red"
Mackinac Island Red - I call this "Michigan Red"
Oatmeal Stout - I call this Not Fat, Stout - Oatmeal Stout

Bottled 5 gallons of Ann Arbor Red on 4/18/17. Bottled 5 gallons of Michigan Red on 5/8/17.

Brewed in 2017 - 22.13 gallons (19.91 in 2012, 48.06 in 2013, 61.39 in 2014, 84.26 in 2015,46.39 in 2016)
Brewed in lifetime - 282.14 gallons
Drinkable beer on hand -  13.58 cases, with 6.11 cases ready in May and early June.
Average cost per 12 pack through all beer brewed - $6.27(ingredients only)
User avatar
mashani
mashani
mashani
Posts: 6743
Joined: Sat Aug 10, 2013 11:57 pm

Re: Tale of 3 Chocolates

Post by mashani »

Funny thing too, is that I find the really dark English chocolate malt to be "mellower" then the less dark American stuff that's in the middle of those two.
Banjo-guy
Braumeister
Braumeister
Posts: 811
Joined: Tue Aug 06, 2013 8:30 am

Tale of 3 Chocolates

Post by Banjo-guy »

Gordon Strong paid a visit to my LHBS in Long Island. It’s called Homebrew and Handgrenades. Pete, the owner told me that Gordon requested a very specific chocolate that he had a hard time getting.
Gordon brewed a stout that day.
There was an article in either Zymurgy or Brew Your own that has the recipe. I’ll try to find it.
Post Reply