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Recipe Formulation

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Basic Parameters for a Recipe. Gravity- reflects total amount of grain ... are about predictive of colors in a finished beer as the names on a crayon. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Recipe Formulation


1
Recipe Formulation
  • BJCP Study Program
  • August 14, 2006

2
Dave Millers Homebrewing Guide
  • Basic Parameters for a Recipe
  • Gravity- reflects total amount of grain
  • Bitterness reflects the hopping rate
  • Color reflects the amount and type of specialty
    grains

3
Gravity
  • Gravity is affected by three factors
  • The amount of grain (malt and adjuncts)
  • The types of grains used
  • Efficiency of the process
  • The first two factors are strait forward and can
    be accounted for mathematically
  • Efficiency is a highly variable and has to be
    determined by experience.

4
Extract figures attainable from HB equipment
  • Barley Flakes 30
  • Black Malt 24
  • Cane Sugar 45
  • Cara Pils 30
  • Corn or Rice 40
  • Corn Sugar 40
  • Crystal malts 24
  • Honey 35
  • DME 45
  • LME 36
  • Mild Ale Malt 33
  • Munich 33
  • Pale Malt 35
  • Roasted Barley 24
  • Six-Row 33
  • Two- Row 35
  • Vienna 30
  • Wheat Malt 38

5
Example Kolsch
  • 2-row malt 6
  • Vienna Malt 8oz
  • Caramel 10 malt 8oz
  • 6 x 34210
  • .5 x 32 16
  • .5 x 24 12
  • Total 238/5 47.5

i.e. OG of 1.047-.048 for a five gallon batch
6
Bitterness
  • Much more difficult to measure than gravity
  • Requires a laboratory
  • Beyond the scope of most homebrewers
  • A number of formulas have been published to
    predict the bitterness in beer
  • Simplest formula for attempting to predict IBU is
    use a sliding scale
  • IBU AAU x 74.4 / wort volume (gals) x U
    (utilization )

7
Example
  • If we use 5 AAU of hops in 5 gallons of wort and
    we assume 25 utilization
  • IBU 5 x 74.4 / 5 x 0.25 18.6 IBU
  • Note 50-50 of getting an accurate estimate with
    in 1 IBU with this formula

8
Color
  • In some ways even harder to deal with than
    bitterness
  • The color of malt is measured by making a
    standard mash
  • Color Unit (CU)
  • 1 CU 1 lb of malt with color rating of 1 degree
    Lovibond

9
Calculate color
  • To calculate color
  • Multiply the weight in lbs of each malt in your
    recipe by the malts color rating
  • Add up the figures and divide by number of
    gallons

10
Example Pale Ale
  • 6 lbs pale Malt (3L) 18CU
    (6x3)
  • 0.5 lbs British Crystal (55L) 27.5CU
    (.5X55)
  • Total
    47.5CU
  • CU/Gal
    9.1 (45.5/5)

11
Randy Mosher Radical Brewing
  • Where to start
  • You should be able to describe your beer idea in
    a short phrase
  • You must consider the following
  • Balance
  • Drinkability
  • Use of good ingredients
  • Layer flavors for greater depth.

12
Mosher
  • The basic of beer styles are built on the
    parameters of
  • Gravity
  • Color
  • Bitterness
  • Calibrate your senses
  • Know what a 45 IBU beer tastes like
  • Know what 20 SRM beer color looks like

13
Gravity and Color
  • Gravity
  • Nothing different new about gravity from what
    Miller describes.
  • Color
  • Mosher sees two problems with things
  • Malt color numbers are about predictive of colors
    in a finished beer as the names on a crayon.
  • Malt color just does not add up in a linear
    fashion

14
Color
  • Other factors that affect color
  • Mash efficiency
  • Batch-to-batch variation of malt
  • Kettle carmelization
  • Aging of extract
  • Finings and filtration

15
Hops
  • The factors that determine how much of bitterness
    get into the beer can be taking into account in
    your calculations
  • Boil Time longer better utilization
  • Wort gravity above .030 lower utilization
  • Quantity More is more up to 100 IBU
  • Pellets vs. Whole pellets will yield about 25
    more IBUs than whole.

16
Hops
  • Other factors can affect
  • Ph levels
  • Boil Vigor
  • Wort Protein
  • Cold Break
  • Yeast type
  • If you use a hop bag up your quantity by 25

17
Ray Daniels Designing Great Beers
  • Six Step process in creating a recipe
  • Identify and characterize the beer you want to
    make
  • Determine malt and extract bill
  • Determine water quantity and chemistry
  • Determine hop bill
  • Select yeast and fermentation plan
  • Ascertain finishing issues including
    clarification and carbonation

18
Identify your goal and Characterize the desired
beer
  • How much finished beer will you make
  • Will it be an ale or lager
  • What is the OG target or range
  • What is the approximate IBU
  • What malt characteristics will it have
  • What hop flavor and aroma will you want

19
Malt and Water
  • Determine Malt / Extract Bill
  • What will your base malt be
  • What specialty malts will you use
  • What mash program is required
  • Consider water and treatment
  • What is the characteristics of the starting water
  • What impact will this have on mash chemistry
  • What volume of water is required.

20
Hops and Fermentation
  • Determine hop bill
  • What is the desired aroma, flavor and bitterness
    you are looking for
  • Determine a Fermentation plan
  • What yeast will be used
  • How much yeast
  • Temperature of fermentation

21
Extract Brewing Guidelines
  • Use Light Extracts- add color with specialty
    grains
  • Use dry extract allows for accurate measuring
    Use liquid for high volume brewing
  • For best results , extract should supplement the
    proceeds of a mash that contributes 25-67 of the
    gravity of the wort.

22
Calculating the Malt Bill
  • To determine the total amount of malt needed
    requires four things
  • Target gravity
  • Finished volume of beer to be produced
  • Fermentable ingredients and their approximate
    proportions
  • Efficiency of extraction for the ingredient that
    you use.

23
Color and Water
  • Malt Color Units (MCU)
  • MCU(lovibond rating x Lbs)/gallons
  • How much water
  • Areas where water volume is lost during the
    process
  • Grains, evaporation, equipment, shrinkage of
    cooling wort

24
Hops
  • Bittering
  • More than a dozen factors affect the translation
    of alpha acids in hops into iso-alpha acids in
    finished beers
  • Exact IBU levels cannot be achieved.
  • Flavor/Aroma
  • Low alpha acid content
  • Low cohumulone AA content
  • Low mycerne oil content

25
Hops
  • Brewers have three options in adding aroma/flavor
    hops
  • Boiling generally for a short period of time 30
    minutes or less
  • Steeping, kettle additions or through a hop back
  • Dry hopping

26
Yeast
  • Five Parameters in choosing the type of yeast
  • Type
  • Flavor profile
  • Attenuation
  • Optimal fermentation temp
  • Flocculation
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