O'Farrelliegh Stout
This beer uses honey and coffee beans to create a rich, full
flavored beer. It does need to spend a lot of time in the bottle to
balance out the flavors. Before the edit, the beer began to taste
good about three months after bottling. With the higher alcohol
content, I suspect this beer will be best between 6 months and a year.
Brewer: | Brian Farley | Email: | versleten_1@yahoo.com | |||||
Beer: | O'Farrelliegh Stout | Style: | Imperial Stout | |||||
Type: | Extract w/grain | Size: | 5 gallons | |||||
Color: |
|
Bitterness: | 22 IBU | |||||
OG: | 1.094 | FG: | 1.025 | |||||
Alcohol: | 8.9% v/v (7.0% w/w) | |||||||
Grain: | 8 oz. British chocolate 4 oz. British black patent 8 oz. Flaked wheat |
|||||||
Boil: | 60 minutes | SG 1.157 | 3 gallons | |||||
10 lb. Dark malt extract 2 lb. Honey |
||||||||
Irish moss added last 15 minutes. 2 oz. of coffee beans, ground for a percolator and added last 15 minutes. |
||||||||
Hops: | 1 oz. Bullion (8.5% AA, 60 min.) 1 oz. Kent Goldings (5% AA, 45 min.) 1 oz. Willamette (5% AA, 30 min.) |
|||||||
Yeast: | Wyeast #1084 and bru-vigor yeast food. | |||||||
Carbonation: | 2.0 volumes | Corn Sugar: 3.19 oz. for 5 gallons @ 72°F | ||||||
Last time, the Grolsch style caps all blew off when I opened them (used four ounces that time.) I'm going to try three ounces this time. | ||||||||
Tasting: | This is an edit of my original recipe which turned out pretty well. I felt that the flavor was more in line with a higher alcohol beer, so I added some malt and some hops to maintain the same approximate IBU. |
Recipe posted 04/16/02.