Smooooth Milk Stout
Smooooth Milk Stout
Here is the recipe for the best stout I have ever made and being a stout man I've made a few...
Ingredients:
3kg ESB stout kit
200g crystal grain
300g wheat malt
250g lactose
20g Goldings
Method:
Mash grain in about 1.5L of water for 60min at approx 65*
Strain liquid into a pot and sparge with another 2L of water at approx 70*
(this is a basic mash and I wouldn't be too concerned about extraction efficiency etc. It would be fine with a 20min steep - all I was after was a bit of the fresh grain flavour and better head retention from the wheat malt)
Boil the liquid for 15min with the 20g of goldings. Dump kit into the pot at the end of the boil to disolve the kit and then add to the fermenter along with the lactose and fill to 20L.
Carbonate only lightly.
The ESB stout kit is an exceptional kit on its own, but these changes made it even smoother.
The minimash could be changed with the addition of some chocolate or black patent malt if you prefer more of that roasted/burnt coffee flavour.
Cheers
BK
Ingredients:
3kg ESB stout kit
200g crystal grain
300g wheat malt
250g lactose
20g Goldings
Method:
Mash grain in about 1.5L of water for 60min at approx 65*
Strain liquid into a pot and sparge with another 2L of water at approx 70*
(this is a basic mash and I wouldn't be too concerned about extraction efficiency etc. It would be fine with a 20min steep - all I was after was a bit of the fresh grain flavour and better head retention from the wheat malt)
Boil the liquid for 15min with the 20g of goldings. Dump kit into the pot at the end of the boil to disolve the kit and then add to the fermenter along with the lactose and fill to 20L.
Carbonate only lightly.
The ESB stout kit is an exceptional kit on its own, but these changes made it even smoother.
The minimash could be changed with the addition of some chocolate or black patent malt if you prefer more of that roasted/burnt coffee flavour.
Cheers
BK
stout yeast starter
hey guys,
I've had a look round for the answer to this, but can't find it. I'll be making a stout next brew, and the plan is to leave / forget about it till winter (yeah right!) before drinking.
I want to make a yeast starter and I was going to use a Coopers Stout, but noticed there doesn't seem to be a lot of sediment. Do you guys use coopers stout for the yeast, or is it better to use the pale or sparkling?
Any thoughts would be great.
cheers
Ian
I've had a look round for the answer to this, but can't find it. I'll be making a stout next brew, and the plan is to leave / forget about it till winter (yeah right!) before drinking.
I want to make a yeast starter and I was going to use a Coopers Stout, but noticed there doesn't seem to be a lot of sediment. Do you guys use coopers stout for the yeast, or is it better to use the pale or sparkling?
Any thoughts would be great.
cheers
Ian
many thanks greg,
I might have a hunt round the coopers site too.
cheers
Ian
I might have a hunt round the coopers site too.
cheers
Ian
gregb wrote:I recall reading (I think on the Coopers Forum) that the yeast was the same for Pale, Sparkling, Vintage & Stout Ales. The also suggested using Pale for cultures as the lower Alc will give you more viable yeasties.
Cheers,
Greg
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rubber.piggy, to tell the truth I can't notice any particular flavour from the lactose apart from a little more residual sweetness. It does give the beer a bit more body and hence a creamier mouthfeel, especially if you don't carbonate the beer as much as a normal beer. In case you haven't guessed, I really like the stuff in stouts. 

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gregb wrote:I recall reading (I think on the Coopers Forum) that the yeast was the same for Pale, Sparkling, Vintage & Stout Ales. The also suggested using Pale for cultures as the lower Alc will give you more viable yeasties.
Cheers,
Greg
Well I decided to keep the stout bottle with the dregs and add a sparkling ale to it ... took a day or so but it's alive now!

So hoping to get a nice quick start on the ferment. Putting it down today.
cheers
Ian
Hi Mr H,Mr H wrote:I would be very interested if you could post your recipe
if you're looking for my stout recipe, it's Geoff's No.94 on the website, but here tis for convenience:
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1 can Cooper's Stout
500 g light dried malt extract
1 kg dark dried malt extract
500 g Billingtons Muscovado dark unrefined sugar
Yeast from Cooper's Sparkling Ale
BREWING NOTES The brew was made using a dark unrefined sugar (as opposed to supermarket variety “raw†sugar) with a view to achieving a stout something akin to Jamaica's legendary Dragon Stout.
TASTING NOTES Had a go of it out of the fermenter. Bloody beautiful. Needed to restrain myself from drawing off glass after glass of it while bottling. Well that didn't last long … A sensational stout, much like its Caribbean progeneter.
*************************************
I'll leave it for winter, but can't wait to taste it.
cheers
Ian
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- Posts: 300
- Joined: Tuesday Jun 06, 2006 4:04 pm
- Location: Springvale south, Melbourne