
 | Some homebrew tips for making a quality homemade beer. |
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 | Choosing the right variety of hops for your intended beer style. |
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 | Finding the right malt extract for making top notch homebrew. |
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 | Try our drinking quotes and impress your beer drinking friends and family. |
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Using Malt Extract in Beer making
Many homebrewers will begin or have begun their homebrewing careers by using malt extract. Your extract is basically a concentrated wort, and by using it, the mashing step of brewing can be deleted.
It can be used alone as the backbone of your homebrew, or supplemented (recommended) with grains (either steeping or mashing). Hopped malt extract is typically called a “kit,” and comes complete with hop extracts added to them. I recommend using unhopped malt extract, and developing your own hop characteristics using your own hop schedule in your homebrew.
Malt extract usually comes in two forms.. Syrup (the liquid form, LME) or a dry powder (dry malt extract, DME). It’s basically made by removing most of the water from a sweet wort by a vacuuming process. Extract is made using very sophisticated machinery and processes. LME is about 20% water, and DME virtually has no water content at all. DME has a better shelf life due to lack of water content, and LME ages significantly faster and also turns darker as it ages.
Don’t think for a minute that you can’t make excellent beer using malt extract! Personally I have made several beers that have scored well and/or have WON in homebrew competitions using malt extract. Also, many fellow brewers in my homebrew club also have made great beers with extract also.
However, it does have its limits. It is tough to brew a very light or pale colored beer (like a Pilsner or other light lager) using extract, because it will caramelize and darken some when boiled. When extract is produced, the wort is heated for a long period of time, so in a way the darkening process has already begun when malt extract is manufactured.
To brew a light colored beer using extract shorten the boil time to about 45 minutes total, increase the hopping rates a little to compensate, and use the lightest dry malt extract possible. It may take some experimentation, but I took first place with a Blond Ale that scored in the 40’s at a BJCP sanctioned homebrew competition with this method.
The key is: make sure the extract you are using is fresh!
There are several different types and brands of extract. Muntons, Laaglander, and Briess are just a few of the different brands out there. Flavor, color, and fermentability all differ between brands. Colors usually range from Extra-light to Extra Dark depending on the manufacturer. I recommend using the lightest extract possible, and building the color of your homebrew by adding the appropriate grains for the specific style you are brewing.
As far as fermentability is concerned, Laaglander is known to finish with more dextrins (fuller body), while Munton’s ferments out a little more and may leave a lighter body. It all depends on what style you are brewing, and your personal preferences.
Every malt extract brand also contributes different points per gallon in figuring out gravities for devising recipes. Experiment with each brand until you find something that suits your preference.
As a general rule however 1 pound of DME roughly equals 1.2 pounds of LME. On the flip side, 1 pound of LME roughly equals about 0.8 pounds of DME. So, you need more liquid malt extract to achieve the same gravity that less dry malt extract would. 5 pounds of DME will give approximately the same original gravity as 6 pounds of LME. Again, this is all estimation, so experiment with different brands and stick with one or two that are the most consistent and works the best for you.
To look at it another way dry malt extract also contributes more points per gallon (ppg). DME has about 44 ppg (this will vary between manufacturers), while LME has about 37 (again will vary with manufacturer). For example, one pound of dry malt extract in one gallon of water will yield an approximate original gravity of 1.044. Therefore, a 5 gallon recipe with 6 pounds of DME will yield an original gravity of approximately 1.052 (6 lbs. DME X 44 ppg=264 points, 264 points/5 gallons=52=1.052).
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