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Stone Pale Ale (Advanced)
5 Gallon example:
Yield: 5 Gallons (about 54 12-ounce bottles or 30 22-ounce bottles)
Mashing
In a 10-galloln insulated cooler, combine the crushed malts with 3 gallons plus 12 cups of 172°F water. The water should cool slightly when mixed with the grain. Hold the mash at 156°F for 20 minutes.
Add 2 gallons plus 2 cups of 184°F water. The mixture should come up to 165°F.
Lautering & Sparging
Lauter the mash. Once the liquid is lower than the level of the grain, begin to slowly sprinkle 3 gallons plus 1 cup of 168°F water over the grains to start the sparge. Continue sparging.
The Boil
Set the brew kettle of wort on top of a propane burner and add water to bring the wort level up to about 6 gallons plus 12 cups, if needed. Bring the wort to a rapid, rolling boil. As it begins to come to a boil, a layer of foam and scum may develop at the surface. Skim it off and discard. Once the wort is at a full boil, put a hops bag containing the Columbus hops in the kettle and set a timer for 90 minutes. Stir the wort frequently during the boil and be watchful to avoid boil-overs.
At 15 minutes before the end of the boil, stir in the Irish moss. At 10 minutes before the end of the boil, put a hops bag containing the 0.77 ounce of Ahtanum hops in the kettle. When the boiling time is over, turn off the heat and put a hops bag containing the remaining Ahtanum hops in the kettle. Cover the kettle and immediately begin cooling the wort as quickly as possible.
Pitching Yeast & Fermentation
Once the wort has cooled to 72°F, discard the spent hops and check the specific gravity of the wort with a hydrometer. The target starting gravity is 1.057 (14 Plato).
Transfer the wort to the primary fermentation bucket. Pitch the yeast (or prepare a yeast starter).
Allow the wort to ferment through primary and secondary fermentation at 72°F until it reaches a specific gravity of 1.014 (3.5 Plato).
Bottling
When you’re ready to bottle, clean and sanitize the bottles, caps and bottling equipment. Put the dried malt extract in a medium saucepan and stir in just enough water to dissolve it. Bring the mixture to a boil over high heat. Remove from the heat, cover and let cool slightly. Proceed with bottling.
Kilde: http://blog.stonebrewing.com/index.php/stone-pale-ale-recipe/
Stone Pale Ale (Advanced)
- 87.0% crushed North American two-row pale malt
- 10.5% crushed 60L crystal malt
- 2.5% crushed 75L crystal malt
- Conversion temperature 156°F
- Mash out 165°F
- 0.171 lb/bbl Columbus hops (12.9% alpha acid)
- 0.30 lb/bbl Ahtanum hops (6.0% alpha acid)
- 0.46 lb/bbl Ahtanum hops (6.0% alpha acid)
- White Labs WLP007 Dry English Ale Yeast or WLP002 English Ale Yeast
- Pitch rate 16 to 18
- Starting gravity 1.057 (14 Plato)
- Final gravity 1.014 (3.5 Plato)
- Ferment at 72°F
5 Gallon example:
Yield: 5 Gallons (about 54 12-ounce bottles or 30 22-ounce bottles)
- 10 pounds plus 7 ounces crushed North American two-row pale malt
- 1 pound plus 4.2 ounces crushed 60L crystal malt
- 4.8 ounces crushed 75L crystal malt
- About 9 gallons water
- 0.44 ounce Columbus hops (12.9% alpha acid)
- ½ tsp Irish moss
- 0.77 ounce Ahtanum hops (6.0% alpha acid)
- 1.19 ounces Ahtanum hops (6.0% alpha acid)
- 1 (35ml) package White Labs WLP007 Dry English Ale Yeast or WLP002 English Ale Yeast
- 1 cup plus 3 Tbsp light dried malt extract
Mashing
In a 10-galloln insulated cooler, combine the crushed malts with 3 gallons plus 12 cups of 172°F water. The water should cool slightly when mixed with the grain. Hold the mash at 156°F for 20 minutes.
Add 2 gallons plus 2 cups of 184°F water. The mixture should come up to 165°F.
Lautering & Sparging
Lauter the mash. Once the liquid is lower than the level of the grain, begin to slowly sprinkle 3 gallons plus 1 cup of 168°F water over the grains to start the sparge. Continue sparging.
The Boil
Set the brew kettle of wort on top of a propane burner and add water to bring the wort level up to about 6 gallons plus 12 cups, if needed. Bring the wort to a rapid, rolling boil. As it begins to come to a boil, a layer of foam and scum may develop at the surface. Skim it off and discard. Once the wort is at a full boil, put a hops bag containing the Columbus hops in the kettle and set a timer for 90 minutes. Stir the wort frequently during the boil and be watchful to avoid boil-overs.
At 15 minutes before the end of the boil, stir in the Irish moss. At 10 minutes before the end of the boil, put a hops bag containing the 0.77 ounce of Ahtanum hops in the kettle. When the boiling time is over, turn off the heat and put a hops bag containing the remaining Ahtanum hops in the kettle. Cover the kettle and immediately begin cooling the wort as quickly as possible.
Pitching Yeast & Fermentation
Once the wort has cooled to 72°F, discard the spent hops and check the specific gravity of the wort with a hydrometer. The target starting gravity is 1.057 (14 Plato).
Transfer the wort to the primary fermentation bucket. Pitch the yeast (or prepare a yeast starter).
Allow the wort to ferment through primary and secondary fermentation at 72°F until it reaches a specific gravity of 1.014 (3.5 Plato).
Bottling
When you’re ready to bottle, clean and sanitize the bottles, caps and bottling equipment. Put the dried malt extract in a medium saucepan and stir in just enough water to dissolve it. Bring the mixture to a boil over high heat. Remove from the heat, cover and let cool slightly. Proceed with bottling.
Kilde: http://blog.stonebrewing.com/index.php/stone-pale-ale-recipe/