Brewing an IRISH Stout is EASIER than You Think | Grain to Glass | Classic Styles

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  • čas přidán 13. 07. 2024
  • In this video, I brewed a classic #Irish Dry #Stout recipe, modeled after a well known example from Ireland, but added my own spin on it with a 10 min East Kent Goldings aroma addition. Overall this beer is not very difficult to brew, and it is very forgiving. I had some issues with fermentation, so my beer took 3 weeks to reach final gravity, and unfortunately finished at a relatively high final gravity for the style, but still tasted great and surprisingly felt dry in the mouth anyway. The beer tasted like its classic roasty inspiration and had a nice earthy aroma note that I loved. If only it was on Nitro!
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    Recipe on Brewfather: share.brewfather.app/o6kj9W8T...
    The recipe for 5.5 gallons is below, your efficiency may vary:
    "March Gladness"
    4.0% ABV 34 IBU
    7 lb Irish Stout Malt (sub golden promise or Maris otter) (62.9%)
    2.5 lb Flaked Barley (22.5%)
    1.25 lb Roasted Barley (11.2%)
    6 oz Acid Malt (3.4%)
    Single Infusion Mash for 60 min at 151 F (66 C)
    Water (ppm): Ca: 82 Mg: 10, Na: 65 SO4: 78, Cl: 123, HCO3: 93
    60 minute boil:
    60 min - Add 1.7 oz (48g ) East Kent Goldings (5.3% AA)
    10 min - Add 1 oz (28g) East Kent Goldings (5.3%)
    OG: 1.044
    1 package Wyeast 1084 Irish Ale
    Ferment 65-68 F (18-20 C) for 2-3 weeks, raising temperature toward the end of fermentation to encourage attenuation.
    FG: 1.014
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    0:00 Intro and Welcome
    0:11 Style Description and Approach
    1:24 Recipe
    6:06 Mash and Lauter
    11:02 Boil
    15:43 Fermentation Plan and Yeast Pitch
    16:30 Fermentation Follow-Up
    17:38 Pour and Tasting Notes
    23:50 Potential Improvements
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  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 95

  • @sergiosilberman366
    @sergiosilberman366 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for sharing! Great videos! They show how you can make excellent homebrew beer in a reduced space like a flat. Keep on doing it! Greetings from Argentina! Cheers!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you so much!! That's awesome, I definitely love it when I get viewers from many different countries. Cheers!

    • @sergiosilberman366
      @sergiosilberman366 Před 4 lety

      @@TheApartmentBrewer Thanks to you! Here, we´ve been going through a revolution for more than a decade when it comes to beers. Day after day, more people turn to craft beer as their preference and each time I go to homebrewer meetings, the attendance is always growing up. Cheers!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety +1

      @@sergiosilberman366 that's fantastic! I never really knew how much people in other countries were able to homebrew until I started this channel and networked with more people. I always thought it was just a US/UK/Australia thing but that's definitely not the case!

    • @sergiosilberman366
      @sergiosilberman366 Před 4 lety

      @@TheApartmentBrewer Yeah! The first brewing company, with their own tap pub in Buenos Aires, was opened in 1999 (bullerbrewingco.com/) and from that very moment, I was hooked for life. Also, if you take a closer look to BJCP guideline you´ll find that Argentina has two local styles: Dorada Pampeana and IPA Argenta which are great to make and taste. Cheers!

    • @oscarosullivan4513
      @oscarosullivan4513 Před rokem

      @@TheApartmentBrewer An American poured beer in a nonic that finally does not have a big head.

  • @charlesk7297
    @charlesk7297 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the video man, really appreciate it, keep the videos coming.

  • @christophermartin520
    @christophermartin520 Před 4 lety +3

    watching this while I'm force carbing two IPA and building recipes for a Dry Irish Stout and Irish Red Ale. Best way to pass the time. Cheers, Christopher

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety

      Nice! You're definitely setting yourself up for a nice couple months! Cheers!

  • @joshuawalkerauthor
    @joshuawalkerauthor Před 3 lety +2

    Just a tip if you still don’t have nitro a year later - I recently learned you can pour at 4-8psi through a stout faucet on C02 and get a similar creamy effect. Still feels fuller than typical nitro but a good substitute nonetheless

  • @chillyhomemadebeer7577

    Love your setup, really great job on the beer

  • @oibal60
    @oibal60 Před rokem

    Thanks for this.

  • @estock15
    @estock15 Před 3 lety +3

    Planning out when to brew my Irish stout right now haha, cheers 🍻

    • @jaffaxl
      @jaffaxl Před 3 lety +1

      How did it go fellow human

  • @rpguitar
    @rpguitar Před 4 lety

    Sweetness, flavor, and mouthfeel in a stout (in most beers, really) all improve as the product warms to around 50ºF. "Ice cold" is definitely for the BMC crowd! Nice looking beer. I've got a malted oat stout at 3.7% ABV to toast with you .

  • @BeerMan421
    @BeerMan421 Před 4 lety

    Hi I came over here from bumpy road brewery he had mentioned you...Man this was a great little show you have here! :) I like this a lot! I’m a home Brewer myself, so it’s real fun to watch this stuff ...thank you so much for sharing! cheers 🍻

  • @AddkisonAlesAndLagers
    @AddkisonAlesAndLagers Před 3 lety +1

    Came back to watch this again. Brewing one of these as soon as the ingredients arrive. Cheers!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 3 lety +1

      Go easy on the acid malt!

    • @AddkisonAlesAndLagers
      @AddkisonAlesAndLagers Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheApartmentBrewer I don't know if I'll use any. The dark malt should get my pH where I need it with some acid salts.

  • @Hannes_Lind
    @Hannes_Lind Před 4 lety +2

    I used Safale SO-4 and had same problem with a long fermentation process and it stalling a bit higher then wanted. I think the roasted barley may contribute to a slower fermentation. Found this after debugging my last stout brew. "The application of considerable levels of dark malt was found to lower the attenuation, mainly as a result of lower levels of fermentable sugars and amino acids in dark wort samples. In fact, from the darkest caramel malts and from roasted malts, practically no fermentable material can be hydrolysed by pilsner malt enzymes during mashing."

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety

      That's definitely also a possibility, but so many Irish stout recipes follow this recipe structure and finish lower. Oh well, there's always something to look forward to next time!

  • @joshanderson1598
    @joshanderson1598 Před 4 lety

    An Irish Stout with a little sweetness on the finish sounds outstanding. Not a bad problem to have. Cheers.

  • @overcaffeinatedengineering

    Nice video. I decided to make this exact recipe for me second brew! Just one question: for those of us who are kegging at all (yet), would you add less sugar to the beer when you bottle? Or none at all?

  • @matiasd5216
    @matiasd5216 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video man. I looked it because I'm planing my Next Next beer which will be a stout (sweet, oatmeal, not dry). Anyway, what do you think about any form of wheat among the griest for this style?

  • @bumpy-isms
    @bumpy-isms Před 4 lety

    This would have been a great one to have on my St. Patrick's day malty Monday.
    Nice job
    Cheers Steve

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Jesse! Cheers, and hope you had a good St Patricks Day despite the circumstances!

    • @oscarosullivan4513
      @oscarosullivan4513 Před rokem

      @@TheApartmentBrewer We have sweet stouts:Murphy’s,Porterhouse plain,Oyster stout,Galway Bay Oyster stout and White Hag Black pig.

  • @andrewmichael5833
    @andrewmichael5833 Před rokem +3

    What steps did you take to try to get the FG down during the long fermentation? I image things slowed up significantly after the first few days. Did you increase temp, agitate bucket, pitch more yeast, etc.? Asking for a friend who tried a similar recipe and is in the same boat

  • @tommanning7337
    @tommanning7337 Před 4 lety

    Awesome video like always man👍🏻
    Just picked up a Fermzilla, can’t wait to use it!! No oxygen exposure and no oxygen exposure from fermenter to keg. 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @nigeandersextraordinarybee3723

    Just had a bash at this recipe, although I added a small amount of oats. Its in the fermentor, can't wait.

  • @kevinbanecker7757
    @kevinbanecker7757 Před 2 lety

    At what point do you add the Camden tablet to get rid of chlorine in city water?

  • @VIGroot
    @VIGroot Před 2 lety

    Hi. Great video. As soon as the current brew is done with lagering, this one is next. Just a short question. The recipe is for 5,5 gallon (20,8 liter) but after the mash you sparge until 8 gallon, 30,5 liter. That does not make sense? how much mashing water do you start and did you end up with 5,5 gallon or more? My kettle is only 30 liters. 8 Gallon wont fit. thanks!
    from Amsterdam

  • @brokentreebrewingco7034

    Well done, issues aside, it looks great! A lot of us going to be drinking a bit more than usual this St patty's I think!

  • @TwoandaHalfPintsHomebrew
    @TwoandaHalfPintsHomebrew Před 4 lety +2

    Great video as always. Have you tried using oats to kinda cheat the creamy mouthfeel? I know it's not to style but could be an interesting hack. Also maybe trying a different yeast that produces more glycerol, I think Wyeast 1469 might help in that category (if you're not already using that for the bitter).

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety +1

      Ended up using 1968 for the bitter actually. I haven't used oats in an irish stout but they certainly do work well in other stouts to get that effect! Interesting idea, cheers!

  • @Bassguitarist1985
    @Bassguitarist1985 Před 4 lety

    You have the intertap system, pickup the stout nozzle for $12 USD. A 20cu/ft nitro tank is about $75 filled, and a nitro reg is about $75 Least that is what it cost me. It is amazing to have! I actually slowed down brewing just to upgrade the equipment putting money I'd spend on kits to the gear.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety

      Ugh...now I really want one! Right now I'm in the middle of car shopping so I have to pinch pennies, but that's a lot less than i thought. I want to keep space to a minimum too but that is an awesome thing to have. Glad you're enjoying it!

    • @Bassguitarist1985
      @Bassguitarist1985 Před 4 lety

      @@TheApartmentBrewer I get the 75% nitro 25% Co2 mix, "beergas" as they call it. Some want a slightly different mix like 50/50 but the guiness snobs use the 75/25.

  • @Hearthful_
    @Hearthful_ Před 4 lety +1

    Great video as always :) One question though, I'm pretty new to brewing. at 16:05 you mean 18-20 C air temperature or wart temperature? Cheers!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety

      No worries, fermentation temperature is always going to be in reference to the wort temperature. Typically this will be 2 deg F or 1 deg C higher than the ambient room temp.

  • @michaellacy8510
    @michaellacy8510 Před rokem

    IME, the small amount of acid malt is key to getting the Guinness feel.

  • @bilboswaggins2323
    @bilboswaggins2323 Před 4 lety +2

    Keep the videos coming dude, nice stuff. As for the Irish stout recipe it might interest you that I've had quite a lot of success with replacing the roasted barley with special b malt, chocolate wheat and chocolate malt.

  • @putradnyana
    @putradnyana Před 2 lety

    How much water to put to make beer?
    I'm a bit confused almost all recipe doesn't list the amount of water needed to be used (?)
    Can you explain this? Thank you! 🙏🔥⚡️

  • @hecker1982
    @hecker1982 Před 4 lety

    So you may want to keep the hop bitterness a bit higher if you put it on nitro since perceived bitterness is diminished on that gas. 🍻

  • @victorgroot6615
    @victorgroot6615 Před 2 lety

    Great video ! This recipe for a stout is next in line. One question, here in the Netherlands I can’t easily find ‘Irish Stout Malt’ but I can find Maris Otter Muntons with an 6 EBC - is that a good replacement ? Cheers!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 2 lety

      Maris Otter will work great as a base malt for this

    • @victorgroot6615
      @victorgroot6615 Před 2 lety

      @@TheApartmentBrewer cheers for the quick response. Would a Pale Ale mout works as well with EBC 6-9?

  • @kserafeimidis
    @kserafeimidis Před 3 lety +1

    Hey mate, many thanks for sharing all these videos with us. I was wondering whether you could be kind enough as to answer to a question I have. My heating element is 2,600kW strong and ideally I'd like to have a bit more power in my boil. I noticed that you have a portable immersion heating element you are using for your boil. I tried to find something similar in the UK but no luck. Can I ask where did you buy this from? Thanks in advance

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 3 lety +1

      I use a heat stick I bought from brewhardware.com. You may need to change out the plug type but I really enjoy mine.

    • @kserafeimidis
      @kserafeimidis Před 3 lety

      @@TheApartmentBrewer many thanks

  • @michaelkinsella4247
    @michaelkinsella4247 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for your Vidio. Please get yourself a Cornelius keg or similar, some nitro gas (70/30) and a stout tap and you will experience a completely different outcome

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 3 lety

      Man, I would love to have a nitro setup. Nitro does completely change the character of the beer

  • @danb6831
    @danb6831 Před 4 lety

    Have you tried or had any luck adding peanut butter flavor to anything you have brewed? I am new to home brew and would like to do a chocolate peanut butter milk stout. I have the milk and chocolate portion figured out "I think" lol. This will hopefully be a thick dessert beer around 5% ABV, all grain "- the lactose", 3 gallon batch. I like the show keep up the good work and thank you.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety +1

      I have shied away from the additional flavor added stouts for the most part, but I'll probably try one out eventually. I like to use natural flavors where I can but I am not sure how to get a natural peanut butter flavor in a stout off the top of my head. Pretty much the only viable option is a flavor extract, which can sometimes have the effect of tasting artificial to me. Either way I've definitely had a few PB stouts that I enjoyed and I will probably try it eventually. I think you should go for it though!

  • @joebirley2298
    @joebirley2298 Před 2 lety

    how long does this stout take to condition? can I drink it as soon as it is keg force carbonated?

  • @philipdrew1066
    @philipdrew1066 Před měsícem

    Hi @TheApartmentBrewer - I think you have a typo in your BrewFather Recipe. The second hop addition is listed as 60 min where I think you intended 10 min
    Hops (76.5 g)
    48.2 g (33 IBU) - East Kent Goldings (EKG) 5.3% - Boil - 60 min
    28.3 g (19 IBU) - East Kent Goldings (EKG) 5.3% - Boil - 60 min (should be 10 min)

  • @paulschroeter4987
    @paulschroeter4987 Před 2 lety

    I want to make this beer. I don't have Kent Golding. Could I use hallertau?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 2 lety

      I mean, you can if you want to but it's going to be fundamentally different. I don't think it would be bad, but you really should use English hops like EKG or fuggles if you can

  • @1TheLord1
    @1TheLord1 Před 4 lety

    Colder Keezer? That could be the reason for your over carbed beer. CO2 dissolves better the colder it is. Longer lines will help keep the more carbed beers from foaming too much btw.

  • @nelsonsmither280
    @nelsonsmither280 Před 2 lety

    How did the dry Irish stout mature in the keg?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 2 lety

      This was 2 years ago, but I believe it ended up being rather enjoyable. I don't remember any massive changes though

  • @adamgodofwar666
    @adamgodofwar666 Před 2 lety

    What is the name or brand of yeast nutrient you use all the time?

  • @michaelbergin3536
    @michaelbergin3536 Před 3 lety +1

    This is a stupid question, I know, but if I was bottling instead of keging, would I need to wait longer before drinking?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 3 lety +1

      No such thing as stupid questions. The answer is yes, you would have to wait roughly two weeks while the beer naturally carbonates in the bottles after you add priming sugar. You can do the same thing with a keg and again would need to wait, or you can force carbonate with CO2 and drink literally the same day you keg it.

  • @timd6468
    @timd6468 Před 4 lety

    Do you remember how old your smack pack was at the time? It is my understanding that liquid yeast packs/vials lose their viability rather quickly.

  • @adamgodofwar666
    @adamgodofwar666 Před 2 lety

    Whats a dry yeast equivalent to the liquid yeast you used?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 2 lety

      I'd recommend either Nottingham from Lallemand or S-04 from Fermentis

  • @leroygross9144
    @leroygross9144 Před 4 lety

    Pretty smooth beer that stout i did try it one's... I don't need a different regulator for nitro do i?

    • @brokentreebrewingco7034
      @brokentreebrewingco7034 Před 4 lety

      yes, nitro needs its own tank, lines, and regulator. the gases are mixed at the tap

    • @leroygross9144
      @leroygross9144 Před 4 lety +1

      @@brokentreebrewingco7034 interesting. Thanks. Cheers 🍻

  • @dontbeadummy.362
    @dontbeadummy.362 Před 3 lety +1

    How many volumes of co2 do you recommend?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 3 lety +1

      I'd shoot for 1.5-2 volumes. Keeps it from getting overcarbonated. I think mine ended up being more like 2.5 volumes and it was too much carbonation in my opinion.

  • @johnsonguitarstudio
    @johnsonguitarstudio Před 3 lety

    If you're getting too much foaming, wouldn't that mean your lines are a) too short, b) too large an ID, or c) both? I'd think you could just turn down the psi for serving and avoid foaming, but of course that *would* slow down your pour.

  • @devinpatch1553
    @devinpatch1553 Před 2 lety

    Should invest in some starsan

  • @brentm4386
    @brentm4386 Před 4 lety

    Why not repitch another pack if it's not working? My thinking is it's worth saving all that beer for a few extra bucks. I was thinking about doing that on my next troublesome beer. Cheers!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer  Před 4 lety

      Well, it wasn't exactly what I wanted but it certainly didn't ruin the beer. I was happy with the flavor regardless though so I figured I wouldn't supplement with extra yeast. Cheers!

  • @patrickglaser1560
    @patrickglaser1560 Před 9 měsíci

    Micromatics gas blender... 1500 bucks... didn't exactly regret buying it but kinda regret it😅

  • @carsonblaylock1789
    @carsonblaylock1789 Před 4 lety +1

    RIP March madness

  • @PULAG
    @PULAG Před 3 lety +1

    Dem Salmon Patties Doe

  • @MrBurty5
    @MrBurty5 Před 3 lety

    I think you made it it a thousand times harder

  • @marioamayaflamenco
    @marioamayaflamenco Před 9 měsíci

    Must be a very dry beer because there's no water in the recipe!