Irish Stout
Irish Stout
hi all,
fairly new to homebrewing but have just had a successful brew using the contents of the coopers kits (ie lager kit, brewing sugar (sucrose?). I am a fan of irish beers, mainly guinness and murphy's stout so am wanting to attempt something along those lines.
I am thinking of going along with the following recipe:
Coopers Irish stout tin
500g Coopers Light Dry Malt
300-500g dextrose
100-150g lactose
made to 20-23 litres
Has anyone tried something similar to this or have any suggestions.
Cheers,
Captain
fairly new to homebrewing but have just had a successful brew using the contents of the coopers kits (ie lager kit, brewing sugar (sucrose?). I am a fan of irish beers, mainly guinness and murphy's stout so am wanting to attempt something along those lines.
I am thinking of going along with the following recipe:
Coopers Irish stout tin
500g Coopers Light Dry Malt
300-500g dextrose
100-150g lactose
made to 20-23 litres
Has anyone tried something similar to this or have any suggestions.
Cheers,
Captain
Try this for a really nice stout although its about 6.9% alc
black rock miners stout
light dried malt 2 kg
roasted black grain 150g cracked
liquorice extract 10 ml
goldings finishing hops 20g
safale yeast
final volume 21 litres
and use about 2 thirds of standard bottling sugar when bottling.
P.S dont use sugar to brew any beer as it tastes like crap, better off spending a little more for some lme or dex. And only use lactose for extra sweetness!!
black rock miners stout
light dried malt 2 kg
roasted black grain 150g cracked
liquorice extract 10 ml
goldings finishing hops 20g
safale yeast
final volume 21 litres
and use about 2 thirds of standard bottling sugar when bottling.
P.S dont use sugar to brew any beer as it tastes like crap, better off spending a little more for some lme or dex. And only use lactose for extra sweetness!!

Re: Irish Stout
Seems like a pretty decent Milk Stout recipe to me but I would consider dropping the dextrose and making it a kilo of malt, though I've never brewed one myself before.captain wrote:hi all,
fairly new to homebrewing but have just had a successful brew using the contents of the coopers kits (ie lager kit, brewing sugar (sucrose?). I am a fan of irish beers, mainly guinness and murphy's stout so am wanting to attempt something along those lines.
I am thinking of going along with the following recipe:
Coopers Irish stout tin
500g Coopers Light Dry Malt
300-500g dextrose
100-150g lactose
made to 20-23 litres
Has anyone tried something similar to this or have any suggestions.
Cheers,
Captain
Het Witte Konijn
I remembered brewing a 'burnt stick' ale and went through the book to find the recipe. I was certain that it was a kit but this turned out to be incorrect. Here are the notes i made at the time:
1.5kg Pale malt extract (not sure if this was liquid or powder!!)
500g malt powder (I should have made better notes)
600g dextrose (It was 5 years ago I didn't know better then!)
100g Dark and Crystal cracked grain
50g Pride of Ringwood
all fermentables boiled 45min with 40g POR
Grain steepd 30min then pitched to fermenter
10g finishing hops
Safale yeast.
From memory I'd do it again, but more/different hops and ditch the dextrose for dark liquid malt
1.5kg Pale malt extract (not sure if this was liquid or powder!!)
500g malt powder (I should have made better notes)
600g dextrose (It was 5 years ago I didn't know better then!)
100g Dark and Crystal cracked grain
50g Pride of Ringwood
all fermentables boiled 45min with 40g POR
Grain steepd 30min then pitched to fermenter
10g finishing hops
Safale yeast.
From memory I'd do it again, but more/different hops and ditch the dextrose for dark liquid malt
"Happy have we met,
Happy have we been.
Happy may we part
And happy meet again."
Happy have we been.
Happy may we part
And happy meet again."
The Irish Stout brew is going down a treat. Been in the bottle for around three weeks. Head retention fairly good and very easy to drink.
Not quite as bitter as a guinness.
Ended up going with the following recipe:
Coopers Irish stout
500g Light Dry Malt
300g Dextrose
150g Lactose
After the success of this brew I'm keen to put another similar stout down. Found this recipe on the internet somewhere think I might give it a go.
Coopers Irish Stout
2/3 Cup Chocolate Malt (grain)
1/3 Cup Black Malt (grain)
100g Lactose
500g Light Dry Malt
125g Blackstrap Molasses
Supposed to be about 4.5%
Not sure if the local HB shop has 'blackstrap' so I might have to try and chase some up? Never come across it before.
Happy Brewing,
Captain

Ended up going with the following recipe:
Coopers Irish stout
500g Light Dry Malt
300g Dextrose
150g Lactose
After the success of this brew I'm keen to put another similar stout down. Found this recipe on the internet somewhere think I might give it a go.
Coopers Irish Stout
2/3 Cup Chocolate Malt (grain)
1/3 Cup Black Malt (grain)
100g Lactose
500g Light Dry Malt
125g Blackstrap Molasses
Supposed to be about 4.5%
Not sure if the local HB shop has 'blackstrap' so I might have to try and chase some up? Never come across it before.
Happy Brewing,
Captain
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- Location: sydney
Yep and there is a lot of fermentables in there, i havent done that many stouts but the ones i have done have all been fairly high in comparison to my lagers etcBeerdrinker32 wrote:just finished fermenting a coopers irish stout with 1kg dark malt 300g ldme 300g dex/maltodex mix,500g maltodex,100g choc malt and 30g gouldings OG 1060 FG1026??? worried about the high fg??? could it be due to the heap of maltodex? cheers
Hi Chaps,
I put down an Irish Stout about a week or so ago, and its creeping up to bottling time
I've taken a few sneaky tastes, and this is the kind of brew you could drink straight out of primary so I'm a wee bit excited...
Coopers Brewmaster Irish Stout Kit
1.4kg Dark Liquid Malt Extract - boiled @ 65 degrees for 60 mins
Chocolate Malt Grain (140g) - steeped 30 mins
Rolled Oats (200g) - steeped 30 mins
White Labs WLP004 - Irish Ale - pitched directly into wort
Threw it all into fermenter and topped up to 18L....
OG - 1060
Current SG - 1013 (don't think it will move much more)
Expected ABV - 6.5%
It's my first brew using grains and additional malt extract and crikey what a difference it makes...
It's got such a smoky/ash taste and is so full bodied... just lovely....
Can't wait to bottle this and let the flavors develop more until Xmas (I hope it lasts)...
Cheerio!
I put down an Irish Stout about a week or so ago, and its creeping up to bottling time

I've taken a few sneaky tastes, and this is the kind of brew you could drink straight out of primary so I'm a wee bit excited...
Coopers Brewmaster Irish Stout Kit
1.4kg Dark Liquid Malt Extract - boiled @ 65 degrees for 60 mins
Chocolate Malt Grain (140g) - steeped 30 mins
Rolled Oats (200g) - steeped 30 mins
White Labs WLP004 - Irish Ale - pitched directly into wort
Threw it all into fermenter and topped up to 18L....
OG - 1060
Current SG - 1013 (don't think it will move much more)
Expected ABV - 6.5%
It's my first brew using grains and additional malt extract and crikey what a difference it makes...
It's got such a smoky/ash taste and is so full bodied... just lovely....
Can't wait to bottle this and let the flavors develop more until Xmas (I hope it lasts)...
Cheerio!