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I want to have a crack at a steam beer called Full Sail. A few years ago a friend from San Francisco sent me some of this, and as I recall I thought it was mighty good. Surprised me as the only seppo beer I had had was Bud, Lone Star, Schlitz etc.
Anyway I have found a recipe on an American site.
Ingredients:
Crystal 20, 350 grams
Carapils, 225 grams
3.4 Kg Light malt syrup
50 g Chinook
15 g Galena
I have some Crystal grain I got from G&G. Is it much different to Crystal 20? And I assume Carapils is just another grain?
From researching John Palmers site I find that the '20' is the lovibond measure. So I figure I can use the Crystal I have. Close enough.
But the Carapils, it says on John Palmers site must be mashed. I don't think I'm up for this extra complexity yet. Might have to find me another recipe.
G'day moby, i've used carapils before and have only steeped them and was instructed to do it that way. Was fairly sure that was right.
I thought crystal was the same as i thought it was a specialty grain that only needed steeping not mashing.
Someone with more knowledge will come to our rescue soon i'm sure cause i like the sound of this recipe.
I want to get into grains a bit more myself.
Not home at the moment but i've got a hops and grains guide including specialty grains i could email to you.
Send me an email (address in my profile) and i can send it to you if you like.
I was a little confused about which grains require a mash, and those that don't - and Dogger & Ash got this wonderful spreadsheet detailing the use of most of the grains.
Even though Palmer says Carapils must be mashed, I`ve got away with hot steeping it{and cold steeping} plenty of times with good results. But if I`m doing a partial mash, it gets mashed with the base malt.
Carapils doesn't need mashing. It's also known as dextrin malt, and it does much the same thing as maltodextrin (adds body without adding flavour). It doesn't have the same tendency to give a soapy taste like maltodextrin does though.