Because, as well as blending pre-fermentation, there was a second blending post-fermentation. In the first, 3 gyles of 1113º, 1089.2º and 1038.2º were blended to create these three worts:
Beer | barrels | OG |
Imperial Stout | 189 | 1097.0 |
Double Stout | 189 | 1083.1 |
Single Stout | 296 | 1070.4 |
After fermentation, 69 barrels of Imperial stout were mixed into the other two Stouts. With this result:
Beer | barrels | OG |
Imperial Stout | 120 | 1097.0 |
Double Stout | 218 | 1082.0 |
Single Stout | 345 | 1076.2 |
Not sure why you’d do this rather than get the quantities and OGs you want in the pre-fermentation blending.
I know from a Truman square book that Double Stout at least sometimes was vatted. I’d guess for at least 12 months.
For recipe details, see the Imperial Stout recipe I published a while back.
1890 Truman Double Stout | ||
pale malt | 12.75 lb | 70.83% |
brown malt | 1.75 lb | 9.72% |
black malt | 1.00 lb | 5.56% |
No. 3 invert sugar | 2.50 lb | 13.89% |
Fuggles 120 mins | 4.00 oz | |
Fuggles 60 mins | 4.00 oz | |
Hallertau 30 mins | 2.00 oz | |
Goldings dry hops | 0.75 oz | |
OG | 1082 | |
FG | 1022 | |
ABV | 7.94 | |
Apparent attenuation | 73.17% | |
IBU | 111 | |
SRM | 38 | |
Mash at | 157º F | |
Sparge at | 175º F | |
Boil time | 120 minutes | |
pitching temp | 60º F | |
Yeast | Wyeast 1099 Whitbread Ale |
4 comments:
Hi Ron,
sorry if I'm missing something, but why does this recipe give an OG of 1076 if that was the strength of their single stout? Shouldn't it be 1082 for the double stout?
Your title says "Double Stout", but the recipe is the "Single Stout".
Ah, I included the wrong recipe. Now fixed.
Completely unrelated: will this be the revival of cask and bottle conditioned beer? https://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/britische-pubs-sorgen-sich-um-kohlensaeure-mangel-a-d2c42695-fc07-450a-8c08-35cedda93730
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