Wednesday, August 5, 2009

The Milk Chocolate Stout

This past Saturday was a big one in terms of brewing for me.

First, a week before I got a new toy.




A brand new Turkey Fryer! This thing will be great. No longer will SWMBO's nose curl from boiling wort in the kitchen. Boiling outside will cut that out. Plus, with a 30 quart pot, I can do full boils now.

With full boils, I will get better hop utilization, which means I need less hops for more bitterness and flavor. Plus, there will be less off-flavors from the extract I use.


Win/Win/Win.


So, this past Saturday, I kicked the outdoor brewing off by starting up my Milk Chocolate Stout.


Here's the recipe.

  • 4.5 lbs of Extra Pale Dry Malt Extract.
  • 1 lb of Chocolate Malt
  • 12 oz. of Crystal 60L Malt
  • 4 oz of Roasted Barley
  • 1 oz of Black Patent Malt
  • 1 lb of Dextrose
  • 1 lb of Lactose (Milk Sugar, which is unfermentable, and will leave the beer sweeter)
  • 1 oz of Cluster hops at 60 min.
  • I used a starter of Wyeast 1028 London Ale Yeast.

The whole process started with making the starter a few days before:

Then steep the grains for 30 minutes at 150 degrees. Here's how we looked after steeping.


Here's the hot break after the boil started. Fortunately, I use Fermcaps so I won't be having any boilovers.


The one and only hop addition at 60 minutes:

My starting gravity was actually a bit high at 1.061. I, along with Beersmith, had expected it to be closer to 1.055, but we shall see where the final gravity ends up. Hopefully, somewhere in the 1.014-1.019 range. It wouldn't be bad for this beer to have a bit of body to it.

In another week or so I'll transfer the Stout to the secondary and add in some baker's cocoa. Probably about 3 or 4 ounces. Hopefully, this should be a pretty sweet, chocolaty and roasted tasting beer.

Cheers!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Can't wait for this one!!! Puck

Anonymous said...

MickeyD! Love the fryer utilization! Keep it rocking man, your going to be selling that before you know it! -Brew