Malt Extract Dark syrup: 3.5 lbs. Light syrup: 3 lbs. Dark dry: 1.5 lbs. Specialty Malts Crystal: 1 1b. Roasted barley: 0.5 lb. Black patent: 0.5 lb. Bittering Hops Bullion, whole: 2 oz. Finishing Hops Willlamette or Cascade, whole: 1 oz. Yeast Ale, dry Clarifying Aids Irish moss: 1 tsp. Gelatin: 1 tsp. Inorganics Gypsum: 5 Tbsp. Ascorbic acid: 0.75 tsp. Priming Corn sugar: 0.75 cup Flavorings Bing cherries, destemmed, washed, frozen, crushed: 10 lbs. Water 2.75 gal. water to start boil 3 gal. boiled and cooled water for start of fermentation 0.5 gal. water for priming sugar
* Sanitize all equipment! I used a 20-quart cheapo pot, a 5-gal. William's siphonless plastic fermentation bucket, and a William's siphonless priming tank. * Start with 2.75 gal. cold water and the three specialty malts. * Bring to a boil. Remove spent grains with slotted spoon. * Add malt extracts, bittering hops, and gypsum. * Boil 55 more minutes, stirring to prevent scorching. * Add Irish moss. * Boil 5 more minutes. * Add finishing hops and ascorbic acid. * Remove from heat. * Let cool a few minutes until temperature is just below 180 F. * Add cherries. * Cool with wort chiller or just let it sit until cooled below 90 F. * Sparge (pour in a splashy manner) into fermentation bucket * Pour in the previously boiled and cooled water to make 4.75 gal. * Add dry yeast to 1 cup sanitized water. * When wort has cooled to below 80 F, cast yeast. * Remove a hydometer-tube-full of wort for specific gravity readings. * Put airlocks on containers. * Take daily specific gravity readings. * After 5 days, remove as much of floating debris as possible. * At this time, drain to secondary fermenter. * Also, dissolve gelatin in a cup of hot water and stir in. * When hydrometer readings don't change for 2 days, the wort is ready for bottling. * Dissolve priming sugar in 0.5 gal. boiled and cooled water. (This will bring the volume back up to about 5 gal.) Siphon or gently pour into priming tank. * Drain wort into priming tank, leaving sediment behind. * Bottle in sanitized bottles. * Wait 2+ weeks for carbonation.
OG = 1.083, FG = 1.031 Alcohol = about 6.0% by volume, including the effect of dilution. Very rich (note high final gravity). A real winner beer tasting with friends. I substituted local bing cherries for sour ones in the original recipe. The cherry taste, even with 10 pounds of cherries, was barely perceptible. In one batch of this recipe, I fermented a gallon without the cherries. It was an excellent stout by itself.