Just kegged and carbonated (lightly) an Irish Stout, but it’s tasting kind of low on flavor…

I’m thinking of adding oak or coffee beans (or both) in a bag in the keg to try and add some more flavor.

Please either talk me down, advise on amounts and time, or advise me on better options!

It’s good enough that I wouldn’t toss it, but not good enough for me to not want to save it…

  • Kayel@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    Could you describe what you mean by low on flavour? Is it sweet? Does it lack body / texture? Is it not bitter enough? Are you lacking roast flavours?

    Assuming the latter. You could make a black patent tea and add it in. Might be a bit hash if fermentation is over, but it could work!

  • CaseyJones241@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Adjusting the carbonation level might improve the perception of the flavor a bit. Simpler to try and tweak that first rather than messing with the flavor directly since thats tougher to undo.

    • Superfly SamuraiOP
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      1 year ago

      Sure!

      First time using this recipe:

      5 lb 2-row 2 lb flaked barley 1 lb black barley 3 oz Peat Smoked barley

      2 oz Kent Golding

      You can taste maltiness and just a touch of what I think is from the smoked barley, but mouthfeel is lacking, as is that “roast” flavor.

      Probably could have bumped up the black barley?

      • SpiderShoeCult@sopuli.xyzM
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        1 year ago

        Thanks for sharing. Mind if I ask why you used flaked barley and not just more base malt? By black barley do you mean roasted barley (unmalted) or black patent malt? Assuming the unmalted sort here, but just to make sure.

        Your mouthfeel lacking could be from the mash schedule. I usually go around this with some crystal malts to just bump the body (go lighter or darker depending on your desired flavour profile, too). For stouts generally, I mix up black malt and roasted barley with a bit of crystal and that gets me where I want to be flavour wise and mouthfeel wise.

        I will admit to never having used flaked barley, so no idea what it’d do there. I’ll also admit that my mind goes to Guinness when thinking Irish stout. But that one’s fizzed up with nitrogen, not carbon dioxide, hence the smoother mouthfeel. If you want to try Guinness with CO2, look for Guinness original or something of the sort, bottles or cans without the widget in them. That tastes and feels extremely different to the nitro one.

        As for what to do to it now, you could soak some coffee beans or cacao nibs in whiskey and plop them in once properly sanitized by the alcohol, see what that gets you, but if it’s too dry, there’s not much you can do to add body that I can think of. You can also try to brew some strong coffee and add that to your brew - bonus, if you add it hot, it’s already sanitary (this is the route I’d go rather than using coffee beans, way easier and no floaters in my beer). I’ve used moka pot brewed coffee before - something like 200 mL (a mug full) for a 20 L (5 gal?) batch of beer was noticeable. You can probably double that if you really love coffee stouts.

        • Superfly SamuraiOP
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          1 year ago

          Flaked barley is for a bit of grain flavor, but mostly head retention. I added it because that’s what the recipe I used said to use… Not exactly a good reason, but it’s also pretty common in Irish Stouts.

          I added some carbonation and your moka pot coffee trick, and that combination did the trick in my book. It’s much more interesting now.

          Thanks for the tip!