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Sixty Schilling, Served

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So the 60 Schilling Scottish is done, kegged and tasty. It actually has a distinct malty, almost pretzel flavor that I think came from the honey malt primarily. The color is lighter than the photo lets on – much more of a reddish amber. Kegged at 5 psi for 1.5 volumes of CO2 at 50 degrees, and sitting in my basement.

60 Schilling Done

Written by christopher.falk

February 22nd, 2009 at 6:40 pm

Flat & Malty

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The 60 Schilling Scottish ale is in the keg after a week in primary and three days settling out in secondary at 60 degrees or so. Final gravity didn’t quite make it all the way – 55% attenuation out of a desired 60% or so.

When I checked the final gravity I gave it a taste, and it’s delicious even flat. Sweet and malty with a balanced bitterness. It’s in the keg at 5 psi, 50 degrees F. Once it’s carbonated I’ll post a photo of a pint.

Written by christopher.falk

February 18th, 2009 at 10:08 am

Posted in Brewing

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60 Schilling Scottish Ale

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It seems like every time I brew something I haven’t tried before I find myself looking up the Jamil Show podcast for that particular style. Usually I don’t use the recipe exactly (though this time I did) but it’s got a ton of great detail on the little things and why they matter. High mash temp for some extra unfermentable body, a little gypsum for Burtonizing my softened water, and so on. And you get this:

Scottish 60 Schilling Mash

The recipe (direct from JZ, credit where credit is due) is below:

4 lb English pale malt (I used Maris Otter)
1/2 lb Munich malt
1/2 lb Honey malt
1 lb 40L Crystal malt
1/2 lb 120L Crystal malt
2 oz Pale Chocolate malt (for color and a touch of nutty roastedness)

1/2 oz Kent Goldings, 60 mins

California Ale (Chico) yeast (I used White Labs WLP001)

Mashed at 158 degrees for 60 minutes, single infusion, mashed out at 168 for 15 mins, recirculated for a while and then sparged. Much darker than expected, but probably the right SRM in the end. Late runnings were (obviously) much paler. Boiled for 90 minutes, and ran out of gas halfway and had to swap in the spare tank.

Starting gravity came in at 1036. Aerated for 45 mins (new aeration kit!) and pitched the WLP001. I’m planning to lock our thermostat at 65 for the next few days and see how it goes – looking for lower attenuation to hold onto some sweetness.

Can I just say how awesome Maine Brewing Supply is? No matter how obscure the malt, Rob’s got it.

Written by christopher.falk

February 7th, 2009 at 5:32 pm

Posted in Beer, Brewing

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