Tennessee Highlander Ale
This is a great Scotch Strong Ale recipe that is a house favorite of mine. I don't have the capacity to do a mash big enough to hit the O.G. so the John Bull Light Extract is a brew-saver here. If you can do it, add another 4.4 pounds (assuming 75% extraction) of pale malt to the mash and leave the extract out of the boil.
Brewer: | Ricky Sheaves | Email: | rsheaves@dttus.com | |||||
Beer: | Tennessee Highlander Ale | Style: | Strong Scotch Ale | |||||
Type: | All grain | Size: | 5 gallons | |||||
Color: |
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Bitterness: | 31 IBU | |||||
OG: | 1.078 | FG: | 1.022 | |||||
Alcohol: | 7.3% v/v (5.7% w/w) | |||||||
Water: | Believe it or not - WalMart bottled water works great for this style for me. It's a little on the soft side so you might want to add a little gypsum to the sparge water. | |||||||
Grain: | 7 lb. British pale .75 lb. Wheat malt 1 lb. German Munich .5 lb. British crystal 95-115L .19 lb. British chocolate .17 lb. Peat Smoked Malt |
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Mash: | 75% efficiency | |||||||
Single infusion at 156° F for around 2 hours ... sometimes less. Start checking for conversion after 1 hour. | ||||||||
Boil: | 60* minutes | SG 1.060 | 6.5 gallons | |||||
3.3 lb. Light malt extract | ||||||||
Here's a little trick: take about 1 gallon of the first runnings and begin boiling it while you continue collecting the rest of the run-off. Boil it vigorously apart from the main boil and add it back about ten minutes before ending the main boil. This mini-boil should have a total boil-time of around two hours and will provide that famous caramelization present in this style. | ||||||||
Hops: | 2 oz. Kent Goldings (4.9% AA, 60 min.) | |||||||
Yeast: | Wyeast Scottish Ale | |||||||
Log: | Primary ferment at 56°-58° F for about three weeks. After that, rack into a secondary or conditioning tank and age another three weeks to three months at about 40° F. | |||||||
Carbonation: | Whatever your method, go low with carbonation. | |||||||
Tasting: | Serve at cellar temps. For a real treat, try this one straight from the cask through a beer engine. Very malty with a faint, smokey background character ... Mmm, mmm good! |
Recipe posted 01/19/99.