Swine Dine Stout
Milo is commonly used for animal feed in the United States. The flour tends to be a bit gritty and does not have great baking properties. White milo has recently been available as a food product, and testing shows Red Milo is wholesome human food, just a bit strong grain flavor and color rich for American diet (favorable in my opinion). Do not use bird resistant varieties high in tannin.
| Brewer: | Bob | Email: | - | |||||
| Beer: | Swine Dine Stout | Style: | Foreign-Style Stout | |||||
| Type: | Extract w/grain | Size: | 5.0 gallons | |||||
| Color: |
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Bitterness: | 35 IBU | |||||
| OG: | 1.052 | FG: | 1.013 | |||||
| Alcohol: | 5.0% v/v (3.9% w/w) | |||||||
| Water: | Reverse Osmosis with a pinch of Epsom Salts. | |||||||
| Grain: | 1.00 lb. American 6-row 0.25 lb. British brown 1.00 lb. Red Milo (coarse grind) |
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| Boil: | 65 minutes | SG 1.040 | 6.4 gallons | |||||
| 6.00 lb. John Bull Dark malt extract | ||||||||
| Hops: | 1.00 oz. Glacier (5.5% AA, 60 min.) 1.00 oz. Progress (6.25% AA, 20 min.) |
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| Yeast: | WLP008 East Coast Ale | |||||||
| Log: | Finish with steamed hickory chips. | |||||||
Recipe posted 10/19/06.