Thursday 11 October 2012

The Great British Brew Off

Our brewing friend Andy loves traditional (nay, archaic) brewing methods. He mashes for three and a half hours, and mucks about with stepping up the temperature at the end (known as a “mash out”).

I’m not convinced these methods are necessary these days. The modern malting process has been perfected over the ages resulting in “better modified” malts, which means they have a lot more enzymes available to convert the starch to sugar.

So, we wondered, does a three hour mash make any difference to the final beer? Indeed, do any of the other differences in our overall brewing processes make any difference?

And so The Great British Brew Off was born!

Both breweries will work to the same recipe (supplied by Andy, below). Andy will use his three and a half hour mash. Cheshire Peaks will use their standard one hour mash. And at the end we’ll have a hell of a lot of beer to drink!

Here’s the recipe we’re working to:

London Porter (1850) Whitbread's Porter Brewery London OG 1060

per gallon

2.25lbs Pale Malt

7oz Brown Malt

2.5oz Black Malt

1oz fuggles

It’s just like the “technical challenge”. :-)

IMG_9540

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