Yeast for Guiness Clone
How dry the beer is. Basically if a beer goes from 1.040 to 1.010 then it's apparent attenuation is 75% (it's real attenuation is different but don't worry about that). If it went to 1.006 it would be 85%. The higher the attenuation the less unfermented sugars are left in the beer and the beer tastes drier. You can control attenuation by control of the mash temp and duration as well as by yeast selection. Using a proportion of simple sugar in a beer will appear to increase attenuation making a drier, less sweet beer.
I haven't steeped flaked barley but I have steeped flaked oats. I think the idea is to extract starches from the grain which add a silky mouthfeel to the finished beer. That is exactly the effect I got. The thing is I probably wouldn't have done it if I had known what I know now about starch conversion. Experiment is good.
If you're uncomfortable about steeping the flaked maize then there are many other extract stout recipies out there which don't require it. I believe John Palmer's book 'How To Brew' has an example in the styles section (which I've done and it's good). It may be online. Sorry I don't have time to find a link.
If you're uncomfortable about steeping the flaked maize then there are many other extract stout recipies out there which don't require it. I believe John Palmer's book 'How To Brew' has an example in the styles section (which I've done and it's good). It may be online. Sorry I don't have time to find a link.
Sure mashing only adds a couple (or three) hours but that pretty much doubles the length of an extract brew day. I know I struggle to find any time at all.I would say that mashing would only add a couple of hours at most to a brewday.
This is a bit of a generalisation but they less flocculant yeasts hang about longer in suspension and hence convert more sugars, more flocculant ones like S04 or the fullers drop like a stone and leave a little bit of residual sweetness. There are some notable exceptions like windsor for instance that apparently refuses to flocc but at the same time leaves some residual sweetness.richard_senior wrote:Is it that US-05 works to a higher ABV than other yeasts? What makes it suited to producing drier beer?
I guess its down to what metabolic pathways are available to the different strains of yeast US-05 probably has the capability to metabolise more complex sugars whereas a yeast like S04 doesn't, so it stops producing CO2 falls out of suspension and nods off

So.. still thinking about this.
I still want to do a Guiness clone using extract. But steeping flaked barley is no good - it's needs to be mashed, you guys have explained. And I'm pretty sure that flaked barley is an important ingredient in Guiness.
So, can I just mash the flaked barley in the oven, and then add to the extract?
Second complication. I don't have any pale malt - which I understand would be required in the mash. Is there anything else I can use to trick the flaked barley into converting?
apologies if this is nonsense - I'm just pontificating
I still want to do a Guiness clone using extract. But steeping flaked barley is no good - it's needs to be mashed, you guys have explained. And I'm pretty sure that flaked barley is an important ingredient in Guiness.
So, can I just mash the flaked barley in the oven, and then add to the extract?
Second complication. I don't have any pale malt - which I understand would be required in the mash. Is there anything else I can use to trick the flaked barley into converting?
apologies if this is nonsense - I'm just pontificating
Yeah, Dry Beer Enzyme it's called and you can buy it from HB shops.
It can be unpredictable though (apparently, never used it myself) - much better to control the parameters through good brewing practice. For example, altering the mash temperature, or even doing a step mash (60/70) to get the maximum amount of attenuation.
As for US-05, good yeast, very dry for a beer yeast, but useless flavour profile for British bitters IMO.
It can be unpredictable though (apparently, never used it myself) - much better to control the parameters through good brewing practice. For example, altering the mash temperature, or even doing a step mash (60/70) to get the maximum amount of attenuation.
As for US-05, good yeast, very dry for a beer yeast, but useless flavour profile for British bitters IMO.