Classic London Porter
This will be my second attempt at trying to duplicate a historical beer. I'm using an 1850 Whitbread recipe for this attempt. I'm curious to see how this one turns out.
Brewer: | Bill Cain, Jr. | Email: | wcain@ccrtc.com | |||||
Beer: | Classic London Porter | Style: | Brown Porter | |||||
Type: | All grain | Size: | 2.75 gallons | |||||
Color: |
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Bitterness: | 62 IBU | |||||
OG: | 1.062 | FG: | 1.014 | |||||
Alcohol: | 6.2% v/v (4.8% w/w) | |||||||
Water: | 2.5 tsp. yeast nutrient | |||||||
Grain: | 4.5 lb. British pale 14.0 oz. British brown 4.50 oz. American black patent |
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Mash: | 82% efficiency | |||||||
I used a single infusion mash. I added the grains to 5 quarts of 164F strike water. This brought the temperature down to 150F. I held the mash between 150-155F for about 3 hours. Mashed out at 175 for 15 minutes. Sparged with 1.5 gallons of 170-180F water. I collected about 2.5 gallons of wort in brew kettle and added enough water to bring this up to 3.25 gallons. | ||||||||
Boil: | 90 minutes | SG 1.052 | 3.25 gallons | |||||
Irish moss added with 25 minutes left in the boil. | ||||||||
Hops: | 1.25 oz. Fuggles (4.9% AA, 90 min.) | |||||||
Yeast: | Wyeast #1098 British yeast. | |||||||
Log: | Brewed on 01/10/01. Planning on 1 week in glass primary and 10 days in glass secondary with .25 oz. of E. Kent Goldings pellets for dry hopping. Fermentation temperatures will be 60-65F. Will bottle (hopefully) on 01/27/01 and leave at room temperature for 10 days to build up the carbination, then age in a refigerator for 3-4 months at c. 42F. |
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Carbonation: | 2.1 volumes | Corn Sugar: 1.49 oz. for 2.50 gallons @ 60°F | ||||||
Tasting: | I plan on sampling a bottle a month to see how the taste develops. I also hope I've gotten the bitternes level right. I had to "guesstimate" what the AAUs of the hops in 1850 might have been (4-4.5%?). I then calculated the IBU's resulting from these hops for a 90 minute boil. My figures came out lower than other estimates for the original bitterness level that I seen for this type of beer, but still well above the modern levels for porter. I hope I'm close to what the original might have tasted like. I'll update this as soon as I can. |
Recipe posted 01/10/01.