Adding Apple & Caramel to a Brown Ale

Discussion in 'Homebrewing' started by NGennaroL777, Aug 19, 2015.

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  1. Brew_Betty

    Brew_Betty Initiate (0) Jan 5, 2015 Wisconsin

    The way you can avoid the dilution conundrum is to make the recipe for a normal batch. Then withhold a volume of brewing water equal to the cider addition. Determine the amount of sugar in the cider and enter it as sugar in the recipe.

    If you think a can of concentrated apple juice tastes as good as fresh pressed unfiltered cider, then there is no reason to use cider.
     
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  2. dmtaylor

    dmtaylor Savant (1,149) Dec 30, 2003 Wisconsin

    +1. Bearded lady speak truth!
     
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  3. MrOH

    MrOH Grand Pooh-Bah (3,995) Jul 5, 2010 Virginia
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah

    Just make sure you adjust for mash efficiency and hop utilization, yes.

    I, personally, don't think that concentrate tastes as good as the fresh unpasteurized, unfiltered local cider I use for fermenting. I also wouldn't waste my money on it to make a caramel apple brown ale, because I can't taste expense and pride.
     
  4. NGennaroL777

    NGennaroL777 Zealot (500) Aug 15, 2013 Massachusetts
    Trader

    Awesome advice guys; brew day is tomorrow so thank you!
     
  5. pweis909

    pweis909 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,250) Aug 13, 2005 Wisconsin
    Pooh-Bah

    Or just plan for less water in your mash, boil, etc. Figure out the desired malt concentration and work backwards, making a higher gravity wort that comes out to desired gravity when you add the cider.
     
  6. FeDUBBELFIST

    FeDUBBELFIST Pooh-Bah (1,765) Oct 31, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    Adding a touch of cinnamon wouldn't be a bad idea either. It should help reinforce the apple flavor.
     
  7. pweis909

    pweis909 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,250) Aug 13, 2005 Wisconsin
    Pooh-Bah

    In case the joke hasn't been made in everyone's mind... Apple Brown Betty.

     
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  8. MikesnoHSL

    MikesnoHSL Initiate (0) Jun 4, 2014 Florida

    What about making your own Apple concentrate?
     
  9. pweis909

    pweis909 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,250) Aug 13, 2005 Wisconsin
    Pooh-Bah

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  10. MikesnoHSL

    MikesnoHSL Initiate (0) Jun 4, 2014 Florida

    That would work for sure.
    What about buying a gallon of martinelli Apple juice and reduce slowly. Until basically a 1/4 liquid remains. Threw a cinnamon stick in during the process, took about 3 hours
     
  11. fistfight

    fistfight Initiate (0) Jan 13, 2006 Massachusetts

    Another idea is make the base beer normally, boil the wort to reduce it to 1-2 gallons, then add back in cider to bring to volume. The reason this is different than making a more concentrated wort pre-boil is that the long boil will make more melanoidins and possibly other unfermentables, which could keep the final beer sweeter. I think @ryane advocated this idea on his blog?
     
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  12. NGennaroL777

    NGennaroL777 Zealot (500) Aug 15, 2013 Massachusetts
    Trader

    hey all!
    I appreciated all of the responses on my original post asking for suggestions as to adding Apple into my Brown Ale for this Fall. We decided on a 5-gal Brown Ale boil, adding in 1/2 gal of Apple Cider in the last 5 minutes of the boil. We are planning on adding about 10lbs of apples to our 7 gal fermenter (give or take) but aren't really sure what TYPE of Apple to add. We plan on baking and freezing the apples two days beforehand. Some apples are great for cooking. Some aren't. Any suggestion on type would be great!
     
  13. VikeMan

    VikeMan Grand Pooh-Bah (3,067) Jul 12, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    I can't help but notice that nobody in that other thread recommended using actual apples, and some gave specific reasons as to why it's not a good idea. You'll often get a lot of varying opinions on this forum, but when everyone in a thread basically agrees on something, it's probably about right.
     
  14. pweis909

    pweis909 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,250) Aug 13, 2005 Wisconsin
    Pooh-Bah

    An important characteristic for good baking apples is that they retain some semblance of their shape. That is not relevant for this application. But you might want to see what these guys say about flavor: http://sweets.seriouseats.com/2011/...st-apples-for-apple-pies-how-to-make-pie.html

    You also might just pick up a few individuals from different varieties and microwave them and decide which ones you like. By cooking them, you are going to set some pectins, which may cause haze, which may not matter to you, especially in a brown ale. Finally, the varieties that are available to you may, to some degree, depend on timing. Some set fruit early, some let. Unless you know what variety you want, based on flavor, than pick something local. "Locally grown" always amps up the coolness factor.:wink:

    Edit: Bear in mind you will be getting cooked apple flavor. It seems like the main reasons people didn't think adding whole apples was a good idea is that it would cost you beer and you wouldn't get much flavor. I don't know about that. I think it could be worth trying. But somewhere in that thread you said you wanted natural apple taste, and cider, rather than cooked apples would help bring that to the glass. It actually sounds like you want apple pie.
     
    #34 pweis909, Aug 24, 2015
    Last edited: Aug 24, 2015
  15. CurtFromHershey

    CurtFromHershey Initiate (0) Oct 4, 2012 Minnesota

    Same as the last time you asked, use one of these types of apples:

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    [​IMG]
     
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  16. wspscott

    wspscott Pooh-Bah (1,958) May 25, 2006 Kentucky
    Pooh-Bah

    If you are going to go ahead and use "real" apples, there is no reason to limit yourself to one type. Throw some granny smith, honeycrisp, golden delicious, ... in and see what happens. Or, go with the cider approach that will almost certainly make better beer. Your choice :slight_smile:
     
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  17. MrOH

    MrOH Grand Pooh-Bah (3,995) Jul 5, 2010 Virginia
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah

  18. pweis909

    pweis909 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,250) Aug 13, 2005 Wisconsin
    Pooh-Bah

    Try it like @wspscott says. Most hard ciders are made from a blend of apples to optimize different flavor elements; of course your strategy may depend on what you want. Be prepared to add cider to amp up the flavor as desired should you find what others suggest, that you won't get much of a payoff with fresh apples. You also might consider dosing with acid blend or malic acid if the apples don't pop enough.
     
  19. Brew_Betty

    Brew_Betty Initiate (0) Jan 5, 2015 Wisconsin

    I'd go with a blend of McIntosh, Fuji, Jonathan, Mutsu, Zabergau Reinette and Red Delicious. No wait...I'd just use cider.
     
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  20. GreenKrusty101

    GreenKrusty101 Initiate (0) Dec 4, 2008 Nevada

    I think this is all secret cider thread code : )
     
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