My question... I am looking to do my next brew asap and am looking for a nice light session ale not too alcoholic
I have a 32 litre peco boiler so as you know what kind of quantities i am looking for
Thank You and look forward to hearing suggestions
When you say materials do you mean ingredients?Scott wrote:You're currently brewing with a KIT - not a recipe.
If you used BIABacus and put recipe one one side, like Lumpy is saying, and then dial in a lower desired OG - it will tell you to use less grain and hops. Similar water. And it will show a lower estimated ABV.
I would recommend purchasing the Brewing Classic Styles book. A great source for recipes. And would use that instead of a kit. Their kit may make a tasty brew, but you can easily do as well or likely better using a BCS recipe. And it's easy. And like has been noted, it is super easy to scale actual recipe up or down.
One note: Your recipe uses Maris Otter for malt base... That is a great malt and would be good in a British style ale. American Pale Ale should have American 2-row malt, I would think... Hops looks okay. Don't worry about it, I'm sure it will taste big, but good...just maybe more of a British APA.![]()
And ABV is more like a lighter IPA, 6.5% is very high for an APA.
You'll have to purchase materials from somebody... Most of use a Local Homebrew Shop, if well stocked. But if you want to - your kit supplier might have raw materials.
Thank You so much...i obviously didnt look properly and can now see the substitute suggestionsScott wrote:Yes, I was thinking "raw materials" for the brew, or ingredients.
The BCS book shows extract amount in the main recipe section and below that shows what the changes if whole grain. (Example: instead of 7 lbs. pale malt extract, use 8.5 lbs. of American 2-Row Malt). We use Whole Grain with BIAB, and can easily convert the BCS recipes to the BIABacus most of us use. I believe there is a link to the BCS book at the bottom of this page.
Are you comfortable using an Excel spreadsheet? I'll attach my BIABacus file for Dry Irish Stout from last April (similar to Guinness...). Open it up and play with it, change desired OG, etc. I've brewed it as low as 3.75% ABV and as much as...think this one turned out around 4.3%.
You'll want to go into the BIAB for New Members page and read some of the info there. Lots of posts there, if you review should help. Clear Brewing Terminology... On the BIABacus don't let the large size of the opening page frighten you...just take it section by section and you'll get it soon enough. The Terminology page will help understanding what the file is talking about... Let us know if questions.
Return to “BIABrewer.info and BIAB for New Members”
Brewers browsing this forum: No members and 55 guests