I’m looking for some help inputting together a lager recipe. I’m going to brew a 3 gallon batch on my Mash and Boil. (biab). Here’s is what I have on hand. I didn’t list the American IPA,APA hops that I have.
( Cascade,Amarillo,Simco ect...)
HOPS:
2.10 oz EK Goldings
.70 oz Fuggles
2.00 oz Hallertau
1.00 oz Saaz
.65 oz Sorachi Ace
.45 oz Tettnang
.60.oz. UK WGV.
3.75 Willamette
GRAIN
10# MO
5# 2 row
10# Munich
3# Victory
3 # Rye
1.5 # Wheat
.5# carapils
Every sort of roasted and dark grain needed to brew stouts.
14 oz C120,
7 oz. C 80
7 oz C 60
Flaked oats and wheat
YEAST
34-70. Safale 23, Safale 33
Irish Ale yeast, Nottingham,
I’m hoping to brew a easy to drink summer lager. I could brew an ale if that is what these ingredients point to.
I’m trying to use the ingredients that I have because I have too many ingredients on hand and don’t really want to buy more right now.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
I keep coming up with an Irish Red but my wife has shown a love for the German Pilsner that I brewed and I've got to keep her happy.
Recipe suggestions.
Moderators: BlackDuck, Beer-lord, LouieMacGoo, philm00x, gwcr
Recipe suggestions.
Last edited by Banjo-guy on Mon May 21, 2018 4:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Recipe suggestions.
You could Brew the IPL that I've been doing for a few years now. I'll post the recipe here if you want to take a look.
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Re: Recipe suggestions.
If you want a lager, it seems easy...
2-row and a little bit of munich to get to ~1.045-1.05ish, the saaz/tettnang/and/or hallertau, the SafeLager S-23 or 34/70, to get to 30-40 IBUs and you have a nice European Lager. Finish it hoppy with the saaz and use soft water to be more like a bo-pils, finish it less hoppy with the smaller amount of tettnang or a little bit of hallertau and a bit harder water to be like a German lager. (some German water is actually quite hard, people go overboard sometimes trying to use soft water for all lagers, and that's not how it is in reality). Cant go wrong with either, it will be good.
S-23 will be a bit more flavorful then 34/70, and would be more interesting with less finishing hops then 34/70 would be. 34/70 would be better for a bo-pils, or anything, you can't go wrong with it. S-23 is good for a continental lager though too.
2-row and a little bit of munich to get to ~1.045-1.05ish, the saaz/tettnang/and/or hallertau, the SafeLager S-23 or 34/70, to get to 30-40 IBUs and you have a nice European Lager. Finish it hoppy with the saaz and use soft water to be more like a bo-pils, finish it less hoppy with the smaller amount of tettnang or a little bit of hallertau and a bit harder water to be like a German lager. (some German water is actually quite hard, people go overboard sometimes trying to use soft water for all lagers, and that's not how it is in reality). Cant go wrong with either, it will be good.
S-23 will be a bit more flavorful then 34/70, and would be more interesting with less finishing hops then 34/70 would be. 34/70 would be better for a bo-pils, or anything, you can't go wrong with it. S-23 is good for a continental lager though too.
Re: Recipe suggestions.
Thanks. I’d be interested in seeing it but I’m going to brew something that isn’t hoppy for the non hop lovers. I haven’t even tasted an IPL and don’t know if I like them or not. I’ll have buy a few to check out.Kealia wrote:You could Brew the IPL that I've been doing for a few years now. I'll post the recipe here if you want to take a look.
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Re: Recipe suggestions.
I agree with Mashani, looks like you’ve got all the ingredients for a fine German Pilsner.
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ANTLER BREWING
Drinking
#93 - Gerst Amber Ale
Conditioning and Carbing
Fermenting
On Deck
Drinking
#93 - Gerst Amber Ale
Conditioning and Carbing
Fermenting
On Deck
Re: Recipe suggestions.
How does this look? Should I add a little Munich? This is basically the Brewing Classic Styles recipe.
4# 2 row
1 # Pilsner
7.0 oz Carapils
.6 oz Hallertauer @ 60 minutes
.45oz Tettnang @ 30 minutes
.5 oz Saaz @ 10 minutes
.5 oz Saaz @ 0 minutes
Saflager S-23 @
OG 1.049. 40.8 IBU. ABV 4.6 %
4# 2 row
1 # Pilsner
7.0 oz Carapils
.6 oz Hallertauer @ 60 minutes
.45oz Tettnang @ 30 minutes
.5 oz Saaz @ 10 minutes
.5 oz Saaz @ 0 minutes
Saflager S-23 @
OG 1.049. 40.8 IBU. ABV 4.6 %
Re: Recipe suggestions.
That sounds like a nice European lager.
A little bit of Munich will give it a more malty nose. It doesn't "need" it, it would be good either way. You could go with 4oz Munich + 4oz Carapils if you do that, it should be fine that way.
A little bit of Munich will give it a more malty nose. It doesn't "need" it, it would be good either way. You could go with 4oz Munich + 4oz Carapils if you do that, it should be fine that way.
Re: Recipe suggestions.
Im playing with the water in Bru'n water.
Here is where I am now. Calcium 41. Magnesium 3. Sodium 7. Sulfate. 7. Chloride. 13
Lactic acid to bring the ph down
mash PH 5.28.
This is by diluting my Long Island water by 75% with distilled.
I increased the two row to a full 5 lbs. It puts me higher than the style for OG and ABV. I already crushed the grain.
Now the OG is 1.058 and abv of 5.5
Here is where I am now. Calcium 41. Magnesium 3. Sodium 7. Sulfate. 7. Chloride. 13
Lactic acid to bring the ph down
mash PH 5.28.
This is by diluting my Long Island water by 75% with distilled.
I increased the two row to a full 5 lbs. It puts me higher than the style for OG and ABV. I already crushed the grain.
Now the OG is 1.058 and abv of 5.5