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Formulating a clone recipe!
By Steve Bader, Bader Beer & Wine Supply
As homebrewers, we are always
looking for new recipes. As a homebrew
shop owner, my staff and I get many requests each week for recipes of local
Portland/Seattle area beers that are common, and people love. So over the last 18 years, we have written
many recipes for customers to replicate their favorite local beer.
Initially my recipes were
written more by “feel” than any basis in deep homebrewing knowledge. The fact was simple in 1992: there was very little homebrewing literature
in magazine or book form to help us to understand the various components in beer. While there were a few books in print, none
were geared toward recipe formulation.
So over the years, through
experience, trial and error, and reading of magazines like Brew Your Own, Brewing Techniques, and Zymurgy, I learned more on
how to formulate recipes. While I am
writing this article on recipe formulation, I would like to throw out some
cautionary advice. The recipes
themselves do not make great beer, skilled brewers make great
beer. This is no different than food
recipes. Skilled cooks make great food,
Skilled brewers make great beer! There
are many variables that you cannot replicate to the beer you are trying to
make. So brew the best you can, and
adjust after tasting your beer. We all
know that a typical homebrewers beer will get better with additional brewing
experience. That being said, most of
the beer we homebrewers make are intended to be of a particular style or flavor
before we even start brewing, so that means some sort of recipe is required to
get us in the general area of the beer we are trying to produce.
Today, we have many tools to
use to produce recipes. Brewery web
sites are a great starting point, along with comparing a variety of already
published recipes on a beer style. Brewing software like Promash, Beer Tools,
Beer Smith, and others make recipe formulation easier than ever. These software tools normally are excellent
at calculating beginning wort specific gravities and estimated hop bitterness
in the beer we are making. They also
give you an estimated color, although that is less critical. These software programs cannot determine
“taste”, so there are limitations to them.
Let’s get started!
Once you have decided what
beer you want to brew, the first step in replicating a beer at home is to
gather as much information about the beer in question. Today we are lucky that most breweries have
web sites to promote their beer. Some
web sites are more homebrewer friendly than others. The best ones for homebrewers not only give
you the marketing descriptions that make you drool, but also give you some of
the factual information to help you formulate the recipe.
If you can, talk directly to
the brewer, this is the best source of information for you. Since virtually every commercial brewer
started as homebrewers, they are often willing to talk to you about their
beers, and are flattered that you like it so well you are interested in brewing
a batch patterned after their beer.
Having dinner and a few pints of beer at their pub in show of support
for their business helps make them more interested in visiting with you and
sharing information.
Primary information you are
after is original and ending specific gravities (sometimes given in degrees Plato),
hop IBU numbers, varieties and their usage, batch size, malt varieties that are
used in the beer, and hopefully their ratio to the total amount of malt, and
finally the suggested yeast variety to use from one of the homebrew yeast
manufacturers. If you can get this
information, you are in great shape.
Secondary information that helps
to a lesser degree, is any unusual brewing methods that are used in brewing
these beers, or additional ingredients used.
It could be fermenting temperatures, fermenting times, additional
lagering time, dry hopping, or a variety of other brewing techniques.
And of course, repeated
evaluation of the beer in question helps you to pick out the flavors you love
in the beer, and what you want to replicate.
Let’s create a 5 gallon (19 liter) recipe.
5 gallons is the most common
recipe size today, and the default volume for this article. In the
Pacific Northwest,
Rogue Brewery is a popular brewery.
Lets use their popular Dead Guy Ale as an example of how to clone a beer. Rogue has a great web site that is useful for
us to use in this article. http://www.rogue.com. Click on the “Dead Guy Ale” link for the
information in this article.
Let’s start with the
malt. So here is the information that
you have gathered on Dead Guy you want to make from the Rogue web site. The original gravity is 16 degree Plato
(about 1.065), that the grain used is pale (Klages and Harrington),
Munich and Carastan. It would be great if you knew roughly how
much of each grain, but you do not. Not
to worry. Virtually all beers use
around 80% to 100% pale malt, with the remaining malts rounding out the grain
bill. Using your brewing software helps
here. For Dead Guy let’s use 90% pale
grains, and the last 10% a combination of the other specialty malts. So populate your brewing software with these 3
malts. This gives you an all-grain
recipe, which we then covert to extract if necessary.
If the software has a setting
for type of brewing you do (all-grain, extract, or mini-mash) choose the
setting that fits your brewing style.
This is important, since this typically turns on the “extract
efficiency” setting. This is a value
between zero and 100, and means the percentage of sugars that you extract from
the malted grains you are using. A
typical value to start with is 65% for homebrewers, with most breweries getting
around 80% or so, primarily because extract efficiency goes up with batch
size. (65% is the value Brew Your Own magazine uses in its
recipes.) This means the average
homebrewer needs to use a bit more grain to get the same sugar extraction from
the grain.
Adjust the amount of the pale
grain to about 90% pale, with about 10% on the other 2 grains, and then check
what your specific gravity calculates out to.
You should be close to the 1.065 that you are targeting. Adjust up or down with the pale malt to get
the gravity you want. A rough estimate
is that you will get approximately 1.005 specific gravity points for each pound
of grain in a 5 gallon batch. For a 1.065 original gravity, that comes out to
12.5 pounds of pale malt, 1 pound of
Munich
malt, and 0.5 pounds. of Carastan malt.
I chose 1 pound of
Munich malt and 0.5 pounds of Carastan malt, since I
wanted the maltiness of the
Munich
to be stronger than the caramel/toffee flavor of the Carastan malt. After brewing the beer and drinking your
first batch, you may adjust based on your feedback on what the beer actually
turned out to be.
The majority of homebrewers
are “malt extract with grains” brewers that use liquid malt syrup and dry malt
extract for the fermentable sugars, and then the specialty grains to add color
and flavor to your beer. These brewers
use light malt extracts in place of your pale grain, again plugging them in to
the software replacing the pale grains, and changing the quantities until you
get your estimated original gravity close to your target. Since extracts come in fixed quantities of
3.3 lb for malt syrup in most retail stores, it is not uncommon to need a
combination of 2 cans of malt syrup and then 1 or 2 pounds of dry malt
powder. Since it is easier to measure
and store dry malt powder at home, dry malt is useful to hit the target gravity
of your beer.
I suggest using “light” or
“extra light” malt extracts in all beers you make, regardless of color. Avoid amber and dark extracts. The reason is simple. You are getting the color and flavor from the
specialty grains you will have in the recipe. This more closely replicates what the brewer
is doing. Amber and Dark extracts will
use some specialty grains for additional color, but you will not know which
specialty grain they used, and that gives you no control over the flavor.
So for our Dead Guy clone, I
substitute 6.6 pounds of liquid malt syrup for the pale malt, and supplement it
with 1 pound of light dry malt extract, to get to the 1.065 original gravity we
want for this beer. Again, the brewing
software works wonders here for you in calculating the original gravity.
Move on to hops!
From the Rogue web site, we
know that they used Perle and Saaz hops, with an IBU level of 40. IBU’s is the abbreviation for International
Bittering Units, and is a calculation of hop bitterness in beer. For reference, hop bitterness levels start
out in light American lagers around 8 to 10 IBU’s, with IPA’s around 40
IBU’s. Check the various styles of beer
in your software or brewing books for a reference chart of different beer IBU
levels.
Let’s use the Perle as the
bittering hop, and Saaz as your finishing/aroma hop. Your software will ask for the alpha acid
level on the hops you are using, and your hop package should give an indication
of what an estimate of the alpha acids are in the package.
Insert your bittering hop
into your software, and adjust the alpha acids. Then adjust the ounces and length of boiling
time (60 minutes is most common) to hit your IBU target. In this recipe we will use the Saaz hop as
our finishing or aroma hop, and use 1 ounce that is put in the beer at the very
end of the boil. This addition of hops
that does not get boiled does not add any hop bitterness that is measureable,
but does add the hop aroma. The amount
of aroma hops is up to you, the more you use the more aroma you should get. 0.5
ounce to 1.5 ounces is common. I
settled on the middle ground of 1 ounce.
Again, adjust accordingly in your recipes based on feedback from beer
you have brewed, and your personal preferences. Remember, you want your beer to be better
than the one you are cloning!!
Here is a little know fact
about hop alphas acid levels. Each year
the hop processors package hops in 200 lb bales. Then a random number of these bales are
actually tested for hop bitterness. Then
the numbers are averaged, and that entire group of 200 pound bales are sold at
that alpha level. There can be a
significant difference in alpha acids when you are using only 2 or 3 ounces out
of a 200 lb bale. So a 2 ounce package
that is labeled 5.0% alpha can up to 20% higher or lower than the number stated
on the package in alpha acids. Hops
also lose some of their alpha acids as they age. So while we have all of these numbers about
hop bitterness, do not trust them too heavily.
Yeast can be a difficult ingredient
to choose, as some breweries keep yeast choices a deep dark secret. Fortunately today, most brewers are less
worried about the word getting out, so again, the brewery may give you a
suggested yeast variety that is available to homebrewers from Wyeast, White
Labs, or other yeast companies. For this
beer, Rogue tells you it is their Pacman yeast, which is currently packed for
homebrewers by Wyeast, and distributed via Brewcraft. If you are unable to get any yeast
information from the brewery, you will probably be best trying to match the
beer style you are making with the flavor descriptions from your yeast
manufacturer. Your local homebrew shop
should also be able to give you some suggestions.
Methodology
Every brewer makes beer a
little differently than everyone else.
So if you are able to visit with the brewer, be sure to ask what they do
differently to make this beer. Pay
attention to fermentation temperatures, hopping techniques, etc. You may find new techniques that will improve
not only this beer, but all of your beers!
Now you have to go and brew
the beer. But this is only the first
step, since you will likely taste your first effort, and decide you would like
to alter the beer slightly the next time to improve the beer, and get it closer
to the original beer you are trying to clone.
You will likely need to repeat the recipe with minor alterations a few
times before you settle on the recipe that you love.
Rogue “Dead Guy” Ale Clone
5 gallons (19 L), Extract
with grains
OG 1.065 (16 plato)
FG 1.015 (4 plato)
IBU’s= 40
Alcohol = 6.6 by volume
6.6 lbs (3 kg) Light malt
extract syrup
1.0 lb. (0.45 kg) light dry
malt extract.
1.0 lb. (0.45 kg)
Munich 10L malt
0.5 lbs. (0.23 kg) Carastan
malt
9 AAU Perle Hops (60 minutes)
(1.5 ounces (42g) 6.0% Alpha acids)
3 AAU Saaz hops (0 minutes)
(1.0 ounce (28g) 3.0% alpha acids)
1 teaspoon irish moss (boil
60 minutes)
Wyeast 1764 Pacman yeast (or
Wyeast 1056 American Ale, White Labs WLP001 California Ale)
0.75 cup corn sugar for priming
Steep crushed malted grain
in 2.5 gallons (9.5L) of 150° (66ºC) water for 30 minutes. Remove the grain from the wort, then add the
malt extracts and bring to a boil. Add Perle boiling hops and Irish Moss and
boil for 60 minutes. Add Saaz aroma hops at the
end of the boil. Fill your sanitized carboy with 2 gallons (7.5L) of
cold water. Strain the hot wort into the
carboy and top off to the 5.5 gallon (21L) mark. Cool the beer to 75°, (24ºC) aerate and pitch
your yeast. Ferment at 70º.(21ºC) Bottle with the corn sugar after fermentation
is complete, and enjoy!
All Grain version:
This is a single step infusion mash. Substitute 12.5 lbs (5.6 kg) of pale
malt for the malt extract syrup and powder.
Mash the 14 lbs. (6.35 kg) of crushed grain at 152º (67º C) for 60
minutes. Collect approximately 7 gallons
(26L) of wort, to boil 90 minutes according to the hop additions above, and
collect approximately 5.5 gallons (21L) of wort.
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