To continue my recent brewing of English styles I had decided on brewing a Southern English Brown Ale (my first brown ale). After doing a fair amount of research into the difference between styles (northern
English brown,
American brown, "other" brown, and southern
English brown) I felt like I had a good handle on what I would like to start off with...

The method behind my combining of malts had partly to do with what I had on hand and partly on what I wanted to create..ideally this brown ale should lie comfortably between a Newcastle Brown and a Sam Smiths Nut Brown..but with more
mouthfeel than both..
...well I missed that mark.
I should explain that I
don't mean that I "missed the mark" in finding something that would be

tasty, brown, and something between the above two commercial style but rather that I missed the
mouthfeel aspect. Now I started brewing this today at 4am..so how do I know about missing the
mouthfeel? Well..when measuring the
temperature before I mashed out (at the end of the mash) I was registering a 151 F..which will likely end up in a
thinner (but still awesome mind you) brown ale..ideally I should have had a 154 F temp at this point..I basically
f'd up my measurements when considering the
temperature of my mash tun and grain..so my water was not hot enough to rest me at 154F-the cooler than expected gear/grains brought me down a few notches.

To
summarize-I'm looking forward to sampling this brew when I keg next weekend, and throw an English
Barley Wine, on top of this yeast cake BUT I'm going to need this batch to mature for a few weeks before having an accurate read on what I ended up with. Then I should have a handle on just how "thin" I made this bad boy.
Nothing like "dialing in" your system. I fine myself doing this more and more lately as I've been
brewing very
similar beers batch-to-batch and this is just another lesson learned.
1 comments:
Boy, Brian, we really are on the same wavelength lately! I'm doing the same things over here in Michigan. Making the same Dark Mild but tweaking some aspects of the process to test the system and learn more about the variables that go into making beers different.
What a great hobby!
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