Honey

General homebrew discussion, tips and help on kit and malt extract brewing, and talk about equipment. Queries on sourcing supplies and equipment should go in The Store.
BierMeister
Posts: 255
Joined: Tuesday Jun 13, 2006 1:53 pm
Location: Adelaide

Honey

Post by BierMeister »

Any one out there who can give me advise about adding Honey to my Brew?

I would like to know how much to add?
What honey type is good?
Is it all that fermentable?
Can you add it as a carbonater or wouldn't it be fermentable enough?

I would like to make a honey wheat beer to start with so if anyone has any Ideas that would be great
DJ
Posts: 271
Joined: Wednesday May 24, 2006 3:03 pm
Location: Mt Annan, NSW

Post by DJ »

From reading this forum you wouldn't want more than 500g of honey..

I used about 325g in my last batch.. Havent tasted yet..

Wating... Wating...
DJ


"No Excuses" - Kostya Tszyu
Cat
Posts: 134
Joined: Sunday May 07, 2006 9:30 pm
Location: Melbourne, Australia

Post by Cat »

I think the general rule is the lighter your beer, the lighter you want your honey to be, as those tend to be the mildest ones. e.g. clover honey for a wheat beer, but leatherwood for a stout, etc.

And at all costs, avoid honey that comes from gum/eucalypt trees! I've heard that those honeys leave a lingering eucalypt flavour in your brew :oops:
User avatar
corks
Posts: 201
Joined: Saturday Nov 12, 2005 1:07 pm
Location: Melbourne
Contact:

Post by corks »

whats wrong with that? :D

seriously, could be very interesting in a stout or a really smoky dark...
BierMeister
Posts: 255
Joined: Tuesday Jun 13, 2006 1:53 pm
Location: Adelaide

Post by BierMeister »

Thanks all for your advise. Especially Cat on the different types of Honey. I'll be trying Clover Honey with a wheat beer.
Sounds like Beer O'clock.
Wassa
Posts: 579
Joined: Thursday Jul 14, 2005 1:22 pm

Post by Wassa »

I have used Yellow Box in several of my brews and love it. I wouldn't dream of making a porter without it. I rounds out the beer, gives it added complexity and assists in giving a lovely creamy head.
The liver is Evil and must be punished!!
Chris
Posts: 3716
Joined: Tuesday Oct 04, 2005 1:35 pm
Location: Northern Canberra

Post by Chris »

Citrus honey is by far the best that I have used.
User avatar
benson
Posts: 53
Joined: Friday May 05, 2006 4:33 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by benson »

i made a honey beer once (should do it again)
i used a coopers lager with 1kg of coopers brew sugar and about 500g of honey from a farm in darks forrest (near sydney)not sure what honey
turned out not too bad at all !
very fizzy though !
User avatar
benson
Posts: 53
Joined: Friday May 05, 2006 4:33 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by benson »

well my brother in law must have read my mind about making another honey beer because he had the same thought
he got a coopers canadian blonde and 1.5kg of honey
oh well will have to wait a little while to see how it goes?
maybe interesting SG was 1072
do you think it may take a bit longer to ferment?
brewbard
Posts: 6
Joined: Sunday Jun 04, 2006 3:57 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by brewbard »

I used 1kg of honey in one of my brews with 1kg of malt and Choc. Porter and some Tettenager hops to balance that out. The honey flavour was quite strong, but if anything it was too hoppy. I've still got some sitting around as I wasn't too fond of it. Don't know if it was the Cascade Porter, too much hops or too much honey but maybe 500g would be better.
Naikii
Posts: 8
Joined: Sunday Nov 27, 2005 5:51 pm
Location: Perth, WA

Post by Naikii »

I have a kit amber ale in at the moment with 1kg of honey added. Been in 4 days and already has an alcohol content of about 6.7%... Smells great.. intial tasting awesome.. looking forward to it in a few months time..

I also did a honey wheat last year with 750gm honey.. wasnt so good in the first month but by month 3 was excellent kinda like a beez neez with attitude
User avatar
WSC
Posts: 272
Joined: Tuesday Feb 14, 2006 9:56 pm
Location: Ipswich/Peak Crossing

Post by WSC »

From my limited experience with honey it's taste fades out over time.

You just have to time when you drink it.

I have drunk it early and got too much honey and on the other extreme after 4 months i couldn't hardly taste it. I used 600g and could barely taste it after 4 months.

Anyone else found this?
Never tasted FREE beer I couldn't learn to like!
Four Hearts Brewing Company http://www.facebook.com/pages/Four-Hear ... all&ref=nf
Naikii
Posts: 8
Joined: Sunday Nov 27, 2005 5:51 pm
Location: Perth, WA

Post by Naikii »

When you taste it by itself the honey flavour doesnt seem to be present.. but line it up next to another beer and you can smell it straight away... I found one in my cupboard from september last year and still had that honey ting
Cat
Posts: 134
Joined: Sunday May 07, 2006 9:30 pm
Location: Melbourne, Australia

Post by Cat »

My current brew had 500g honey and 250g maple syrup.

You can really smell the sweetness, but the taste of the actual beer is quite dry. So I guess all the honey ferments out, but it leaves the aroma.
User avatar
benson
Posts: 53
Joined: Friday May 05, 2006 4:33 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by benson »

benson wrote:well my brother in law must have read my mind about making another honey beer because he had the same thought
he got a coopers canadian blonde and 1.5kg of honey
oh well will have to wait a little while to see how it goes?
maybe interesting SG was 1072
do you think it may take a bit longer to ferment?
it had a fg of aroud 1000
and im just drinking 1 now not bad at all had to keg it cause we ran out of bottles :D
scblack
Posts: 454
Joined: Saturday Jul 23, 2005 9:12 pm
Location: Baulkham Hills, Sydney

Post by scblack »

WSC wrote:From my limited experience with honey it's taste fades out over time.

You just have to time when you drink it.

I have drunk it early and got too much honey and on the other extreme after 4 months i couldn't hardly taste it. I used 600g and could barely taste it after 4 months.

Anyone else found this?
I THINK thats right, due to the honey being a much more complex molecule, and takes longer to fully ferment. Thus, the longer it sits around, the more the flavour dissipates.

Could be wrong though, but I have heard that from several people, who do know what they are talking about.
"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.
da_damage_done
Posts: 150
Joined: Sunday Oct 23, 2005 11:54 am
Location: Wollongong, NSW, Australia
Contact:

Post by da_damage_done »

WSC wrote:From my limited experience with honey it's taste fades out over time.

You just have to time when you drink it.

I have drunk it early and got too much honey and on the other extreme after 4 months i couldn't hardly taste it. I used 600g and could barely taste it after 4 months.

Anyone else found this?
Yep
Wassa
Posts: 579
Joined: Thursday Jul 14, 2005 1:22 pm

Post by Wassa »

With regards to the amount of honey to use I usually use 500gm of Yellowbox. I use yellowbox because I can readily obtain it from the supermarket.

Whatever you do, DO NOT use any Reg Gum honey or any from a Eucalypt. I made a honey porter using red gum and have had to toss it because all you can smell and taste is eucalyptus.

I believe that honey gives beer an added complexity and definately assists in a creamy head. With the porters I have made you can just discern the honey in the nose and it gives the beer a fuller finish.
The liver is Evil and must be punished!!
Sathias
Posts: 142
Joined: Wednesday Jun 28, 2006 5:19 pm
Location: Adelaide, home of Coopers

Post by Sathias »

My mate was talking about making a Honey liqueur out of Orange Blossom Honey, I'm thinking I might get some to put into a Wheat Beer :)
ACTbrewer
Posts: 273
Joined: Monday May 08, 2006 5:08 pm
Location: ACT

Post by ACTbrewer »

My HB guy told me I needed to boil honey as the enzymes needed to be converted. Can anyone confirm this?
Post Reply