Sonny wrote:Now that's interesting Benny, I have found the Coopers English Bitter in recommended form a good drop as well. But it lost its flavor as time went on. I then doubled the malt to a kilo of LDME and added some Golden Syrup to try and keep something in it. Yes, it turned out that it now had stuff all flavor young and got better with age.
But I believe there would be a way to make this 'can' great, let me know when it's something you just need more of.
Also, let me know when you make a black better or equal to the Old or Coopers Dark. I will be interested in the recipe, and likewise from me if I break it too.
As stated I've been experimenting with Cooper English Bitter. Well I reckon I've got a beauty. Although at this stage only 4 weeks in the bottle this is how it is. Nice creamy head, active bubbles. Head clings to side of glass as consumed.initial taste of sweetness followed by the normal bitterness. However after 30 seconds or so a nice light sweetness feel in the palete. My wife doesn't drink but is a good " sampler" for my brews. She without prompts from my self said the same but on the sweet after taste she ask if I'd used honey. I was braggingly rapped.
Recipe- 1 can Coopers Eng Bitter, 500gm LDME, 100gm soft brown sugar, 200 gm of pure honey (used bush malley)- both brought to boil in 500ml water to dissolve and addedtoadded to wort. 23 Litres, yeast pitched at 22 degrees, fermented at 18. Osg 1056, fsg 1020. In primary for 13 days - bottled. Believe you should try this. EDIT sorry fogot 15ml of liquorice.
Cheers BB
A barrel a day keeps the doctor away. Drink more piss.