

Pale Malt, Maris Otter Grain 8.800 kg Yes No 82% 6 LĬaramel/Crystal Malt - 80L Grain 500.000 g Yes No 74% 158 Līrown Sugar, Dark Sugar 700.000 g No No 100% 50 L I think allowing each ingredient to speak for itself is what makes a good beer. Now with the above in mind I have come up with my own take on a Barley Wine and like pretty much all my recipes I have gone pretty simple, when I look at recipes that contain a whole array of malts, sometimes in such small quantities I can’t really tell what they are going to add I tend to move on. English hops such as Northdown, Target, East Kent Goldings and Fuggles. Dark malts should be used with great restraint, if at all, as most of the color arises from a lengthy boil. Ingredients: Well-modified pale malt should form the backbone of the grist, with judicious amounts of caramel malts. Carbonation may be low to moderate, depending on age and conditioning. A smooth warmth from aged alcohol should be present. Mouthfeel: Full-bodied and chewy, with a velvety, luscious texture (although the body may decline with long conditioning). Aged versions may have a sherry-like quality, possibly vinous or port-like aromatics, and generally more muted malt aromas. The aroma may have a rich character including bready, toasty, toffee, molasses, and/or treacle notes. The intensity of these aromatics often subsides with age. Alcohol aromatics may be low to moderate. English hop aroma may range from mild to assertive. May have moderate to strong fruitiness, often with a dried-fruit character. Take a look at the BJCP guidelines regarding an English Barley Wine:įlavor: Very rich and strongly malty, often with a caramel-like aroma. Barley Wine is a bit more special than a strong bitter because of the malt bill being beefed up so much you end up with richer, deeper and more complex malt flavours and this is what I want to really shine through in my version. Generally speaking, a Barley Wine is a very strong bitter in many aspects. I have talked about reusing yeast before so if you’re wondering what’s involved take a look at this post – Reusing Yeast. This will be more than enough to ensure a good fermentation of a higher ABV beer like this Barley Wine. I am brewing a smaller beer anyway so it makes sense for me just to reuse the yeast. This is not entirely necessary of course you may want to just use a couple of packages of yeast which will have a similar effect of pitching a higher cell count. This is why I decided to ramp up some yeast by making a smaller beer in the first instance and then using the yeast slurry from that fermentation for the Barley Wine.

The first thing you may notice about brewing a Barley Wine is the amount of alcohol.
