Well... is it really worth putting honey in beer?
I know a lot of people do it. I wanna know, are you for it, or against it?
Also, which type of honey have you had the most success with..... and what beer is open to honey use?
Honey
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Im all for it pants...I've used it in the last 2 brews (Canadian Blonde & Wheat Beer) & both in primary...had plenty of aroma & a nice sweet initial taste.
Both times I used Leabrooks Premium honey....325g boiled for 5 mins & added to fermenter.
Both times I used Leabrooks Premium honey....325g boiled for 5 mins & added to fermenter.



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I've used honey in the following
1 can Coopers Pale Ale
1kg BE #2
350g Honey
1 can Coopers Canadian Blonde
1kg BE #1
400g Honey
The first was brilliant - only a slight hint of the honey
The second was good too.
I'd definitly try it in a brew to make your own mind up - try about 300g
From memory I remember reading that it's 95% fermentable and gives a slightly drier beer - but overall it doesn't change the taste drastically
I don't know what sort of honey I used - I just grabbed what was in the cupboard!
I've just bottled this
1 can Coopers Canadian Blonde
1kg BE #2
300g Honey
250g Light Dried Malt
12g Pride of Ringwood hops
100g Carapils grain
I'll report back when I've tasted it
Cheers
My tasting notes are here - http://hyperfox.info/beer
1 can Coopers Pale Ale
1kg BE #2
350g Honey
1 can Coopers Canadian Blonde
1kg BE #1
400g Honey
The first was brilliant - only a slight hint of the honey
The second was good too.
I'd definitly try it in a brew to make your own mind up - try about 300g
From memory I remember reading that it's 95% fermentable and gives a slightly drier beer - but overall it doesn't change the taste drastically
I don't know what sort of honey I used - I just grabbed what was in the cupboard!
I've just bottled this
1 can Coopers Canadian Blonde
1kg BE #2
300g Honey
250g Light Dried Malt
12g Pride of Ringwood hops
100g Carapils grain
I'll report back when I've tasted it
Cheers
My tasting notes are here - http://hyperfox.info/beer
I've done a Coopers Bavarian Lager, with BE#2 1kg and 500g honey, and it really didn't seem to add much according to me. But I did use two teabags of saaz hops, so that may have masked the honey a bit. A bit drier, as damage says, but I'm personally not fussed.
According to Dogger, 500grams is the max. to use though.
I will try it sometime in a wheat though, but if it does not add much to a wheat I'll give up on honey.
According to Dogger, 500grams is the max. to use though.
I will try it sometime in a wheat though, but if it does not add much to a wheat I'll give up on honey.
"Not all chemicals are bad. Without chemicals such as hydrogen and oxygen, for example, there would be no way to make water, a vital ingredient in beer." - Dave Barry.
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I did the same type of clone with Leabrooks premium honey & it seems to be ok but havent bottled it yet but will post resultsmikey wrote:).Roger that. I made a redback clone using Ironbark and it turned out bloody awful (still working my way through it thoughChris wrote: The best honey to use in beer is citrus honey. Avoid eucalyptus honeys at all cost.).



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"Ah that's just drunk talk, sweet beautiful drunk talk" - Homer
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