Old Monster
This beer was made to get rid of all the left over stuff I had after an 18-month brewing hiatus. The Tettanger hops had been kept in the freezer for 18 months. The Kent hops had been in the freezer for 8 years! The pale malt, and DME were 18 months old. The honey was actually at least 8 years old, as was the chocolate malt. Wheat and crystal malt were new, as were the toasted oats. It will be interesting to see whether a decent beer can be made with so much old stuff.
Brewer: | Larry Maler | Email: | lmaler@tampabay.rr.com | |||||
Beer: | Old Monster | Style: | Robust Porter | |||||
Type: | All grain | Size: | 25 liters | |||||
Color: |
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Bitterness: | 30 IBU | |||||
OG: | 1.064 | FG: | 1.013 | |||||
Alcohol: | 6.6% v/v (5.2% w/w) | |||||||
Water: | Soft water. No treatment. | |||||||
Grain: | 7 lb. American 2-row 1 lb. Wheat malt 1 lb. American crystal 20L 0.5 lb. British chocolate 0.5 lb. Rolled oats |
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Mash: | 68% efficiency | |||||||
122°F for 30 minutes, then up to 152°F, dropping to 149°F, which was held for 90 minutes. The oats in the mash were toasted for 30 minutes at 350°F. | ||||||||
Boil: | 90 minutes | SG 1.057 | 28 liters | |||||
2 lb. Light dry malt extract 2 lb. Honey |
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Hops were introduced into the wort immediately after recirculation, i.e. "first wort hopping" | ||||||||
Hops: | 18g Kent Goldings (4.8% AA, 90 min.) 28.4g Saaz (3.6% AA, 90 min.) 20g Tettnanger (5.1% AA, 90 min.) 28.4g Saaz (aroma) |
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Yeast: | White Labs WLP007 Dry English Ale yeast. A starter was made. This yeast flocculates extremely well. | |||||||
Log: | Brewed July 4, 2004. Racked to secondary July 16, 2004. Bottled August 1, 2004. | |||||||
Carbonation: | 1.5 cups dry malt extract, batch primed. | |||||||
Tasting: | I tasted a bit during bottling: this is a very malty beer with chocolate malt in the foreground and sweet malt/hops in the background, as well as a warm alcoholic glow all around it. Drank a bottle 2 weeks after bottling. It is almost fully carbonated, but still a touch sweet so it really needs another 2-3 weeks of rest. It is very very malty. I'll add another note in 3 weeks. |
Recipe posted 08/13/04.