Wheeler, G and Protz, R, 1998, Brew Your Own British Real Ale, CAMRA Ltd, p.145.
Timothy Taylor Landlord
A superb beer of enormous character and complexity, from the Knowle Spring brewery in Keighley. Stunning, mouth-filling, multi-layered interweaving of malt and hop with intense hop and fruit finish.
OG: 1042, 10.0o Plato
For 23 litres:
4280g Golden Promise pale malt
39g EK Goldings hops (7.9% A/A) at start of boil
32g Fuggles hops (4.5%) at start of boil
15g (Styrian) Goldings hops (5.3%) at 15 mins
Irish moss at 15 mins
WLP022 Essex Ale yeast
Mash at 66C for 90 mins. Boil time 90 mins. Racking gravity 1009, 2.3 degrees Plato.
4.4% abv, 35 IBU, 10 EBC, 6 SRM.
Trough Lolly wrote:Wheeler, G and Protz, R, 1998, Brew Your Own British Real Ale, CAMRA Ltd, p.145.
Timothy Taylor Landlord
A superb beer of enormous character and complexity, from the Knowle Spring brewery in Keighley. Stunning, mouth-filling, multi-layered interweaving of malt and hop with intense hop and fruit finish.
OG: 1042, 10.0o Plato
For 23 litres:
4280g Golden Promise pale malt
39g EK Goldings hops (7.9% A/A) at start of boil
32g Fuggles hops (4.5%) at start of boil
15g (Styrian) Goldings hops (5.3%) at 15 mins
Irish moss at 15 mins
WLP022 Essex Ale yeast
Mash at 66C for 90 mins. Boil time 90 mins. Racking gravity 1009, 2.3 degrees Plato.
4.4% abv, 35 IBU, 10 EBC, 6 SRM.
Cheers,
TL
(I can also source Timothy Taylor Best Bitter if req'd...)
drsmurto wrote:Damn i love english ales!
drsmurto wrote:
Damn i love english ales!
Cheers
DrSmurto
Ross wrote:They might use 100% GP, but i reckon some of it is crystal. the above recipe does not come up like TTL; colour alone is way too pale & 15gms @ 15mins of Styrian is not going to give you the wonderful TTl aroma. Have you tried it TL?
cheers ross
"Timothy Taylor's has been using the same yeast for at least 30 years. It is a hybrid of the John Smith's and former Oldham Brewery yeasts, and Mr. Hey reckons it produces a beer with a "polished" clarity, firm "mouth-feel" and quenching finish. Open fermenters are used, too."
He also said:
"Before the glass coded "R" reached my lips, my senses were aroused by the aroma of hops. If you think that sounds fanciful, you have never had a truly hoppy beer. This was such a brew. The hop is a resiny flower, and here it was at its aromatic best, as sharp as the zest from an orange-skin. At first sip, I doubted we could taste a better ale among the seven finalists."
tazman67 wrote:Would love to see the TT Best Bitter recipe TL ?
Wheeler, G and Protz, R, 1998, Brew Your Own British Real Ale, CAMRA Ltd, p.144.
Timothy Taylor Best Bitter
A golden bitter of exceptional quality and drinkability. Full and complex grain and fruit with deep, dry nutty finish.
OG: 1037, 9.2o Plato
For 23 litres:
3600g Golden Promise malt
220g crystal malt
22g Styrian Goldings hops (7.9%) at start of boil
26g Fuggles hops (4.5%) at start of boil
10g Goldings hops (5.3%) at 15 mins
Irish moss at 15 mins
Mash at 60C ((that's wot it says!)) for 90 mins. Boil time 90 mins. Racking gravity 1009, 2.2o Plato. 3.8% abv, 24 IBU, 17 EBC, 9 SRM.
rohanbutler wrote:Hey Guys,
Have been following this with interest as although I have not tried Landord myself, several mates with excellent beer taste have come back from the UK and have raved about this beer.
First question where in Victoria would you source some of this for a taste test(admittedly I haven't looked hard at Dan Murphys)
Secondly, I would like to try and brew something like this (would impress said mates I could come even close to this beer), but I'm only set up for the Trough Lough Partial Mash In the kitchen for the moment, so any suggestions on converting to a partial recipe?
Thanks,
Rohan
rohanbutler wrote:... cooper Light liquid male extract.
gregb wrote:rohanbutler wrote:... cooper Light liquid male extract.
There's a girls' version?
I crack myself up...
Cheers,
Greg
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