coopers australian pale ale
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coopers australian pale ale
I'v searched a fair bit for a great recipe for this, but am left a little wanting.
i got a cooper's australian pale ale from bi-lo today, just becouse really. what exacly should i buy from my home brew shop tomorrow? i'm going in to get a bench capper, i figured some good hops, a decent yeast and some great fermentables for this can will fit on the shopping list.
this is my second brew, so i dont want to mess it up. it has to taste at least as good as my 1st. (morgan's pilsner kit+kilo of dex)
however, I am an experimental kind of guy, so if you want me to try something a little bit crazy out, if it sounds good to me i might give it a whirl. throw in your suggestions!
many thanks in advance!
i got a cooper's australian pale ale from bi-lo today, just becouse really. what exacly should i buy from my home brew shop tomorrow? i'm going in to get a bench capper, i figured some good hops, a decent yeast and some great fermentables for this can will fit on the shopping list.
this is my second brew, so i dont want to mess it up. it has to taste at least as good as my 1st. (morgan's pilsner kit+kilo of dex)
however, I am an experimental kind of guy, so if you want me to try something a little bit crazy out, if it sounds good to me i might give it a whirl. throw in your suggestions!
many thanks in advance!
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try this,
Black rock pale ale
500g glucose/dextrose
500g normal white sugar (trust me
)
50g carapils grain (crushed)
pride of ringwood hops 12g (5 min simmer)
Yeast starter made from the bottle that you just bought
( if you dont know how to do this then do a search as it has come up plenty of times)
final volume 21 litres
Enjoy!

Black rock pale ale
500g glucose/dextrose
500g normal white sugar (trust me

50g carapils grain (crushed)
pride of ringwood hops 12g (5 min simmer)
Yeast starter made from the bottle that you just bought

final volume 21 litres
Enjoy!


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- Posts: 61
- Joined: Friday Sep 01, 2006 1:36 am
- Location: Melbourne
- Contact:
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- Posts: 61
- Joined: Friday Sep 01, 2006 1:36 am
- Location: Melbourne
- Contact:
I've got the same brew down with about a week on it.DonMI6 wrote:I just bottled my first Coopers PA yesterday, done as per instructions with a 1kg bag of BE2 & the kit yeast.
Gotta say, straight out of the fermenter it smelt & tasted sensational and I'm gonna do another tonight using a can of Morgans Caramalt.
Everyone here seems to love to say all these additives are needed to "improve" the brew (bloody beer snobs you lot are

I'm a bit scared about lethaldog suggesting we trust him about the white sugar though!

Some recipes need a hint of the flavour that sugar will give, but its up to you if you want to try it or notAsh wrote:I've got the same brew down with about a week on it.DonMI6 wrote:I just bottled my first Coopers PA yesterday, done as per instructions with a 1kg bag of BE2 & the kit yeast.
Gotta say, straight out of the fermenter it smelt & tasted sensational and I'm gonna do another tonight using a can of Morgans Caramalt.
Everyone here seems to love to say all these additives are needed to "improve" the brew (bloody beer snobs you lot are), but I reckon go for the baseline K&K as Coopers specify (can of CPA + BE2), then improve it to your own taste next time if you aren't satisfied.
I'm a bit scared about lethaldog suggesting we trust him about the white sugar though!




Do what I did, rack half with hops added and bottle the other half......you really do then get a "taste test" of the same beerAsh wrote:oh I know there's lots of improvements to be made - but if you go customising the recipe straight off the bat how do you know where the baseline is?

A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
Give me a flying headbutt.......
Give me a flying headbutt.......
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- Posts: 195
- Joined: Thursday Jun 01, 2006 11:42 am
- Location: Melbourne
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- Posts: 195
- Joined: Thursday Jun 01, 2006 11:42 am
- Location: Melbourne
Starter
I've just put together a starter using dregs of 3 CPA longies and 100g of LDME boiled in about half a litre of water.
This will eventually (tomorrow?) go into a blackrock IPA.
I'll let you know how it goes.
This will eventually (tomorrow?) go into a blackrock IPA.
I'll let you know how it goes.
Convert Number 1093
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- Posts: 195
- Joined: Thursday Jun 01, 2006 11:42 am
- Location: Melbourne
Re: Starter
I find you need about 48 hours to get high krausen.derfly wrote:This will eventually (tomorrow?) go into a blackrock IPA.
w00t!
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- Posts: 195
- Joined: Thursday Jun 01, 2006 11:42 am
- Location: Melbourne
i think i will add to my can of coopers APA
150g crystal grain
1kg of LDME minus what i need for bulk priming (180g)
goldings hop pellets 12g boiled for 5 mins
SAFale-S04 yeast
will this be too sweet? i have 12g of cascade and 12g left over of goldings should i boil them up to make it a bit more bitter?
also what % will it be, about 4.7?
150g crystal grain
1kg of LDME minus what i need for bulk priming (180g)
goldings hop pellets 12g boiled for 5 mins
SAFale-S04 yeast
will this be too sweet? i have 12g of cascade and 12g left over of goldings should i boil them up to make it a bit more bitter?
also what % will it be, about 4.7?
I put down a Coopers Aust. Pale with just a kilo of BE2 and the kit yeast as my third brew. I thought it was pretty good after a week in the bottle. My only criticism is lack of head retention, but this might improve with age. Next time I'll probably use some carapils to fix this.
I also found the bottle dregs to be pretty firm and not easy to move, so you can pretty much pour off all of the bear nice and clearly.
I also found the bottle dregs to be pretty firm and not easy to move, so you can pretty much pour off all of the bear nice and clearly.