Carapils (Briess)
Carapils adds body, mouthfeel and improves head retention by adding dextrines, proteins, non-starch polysaccharides, and other body-building compounds into your wort. Carapils is usually used at a level of 5% or less of your total all-grain malt bill. However it can be used at a higher rate in special cases, say if you are making a Session IPA, and are trying to simulate a higher gravity beer. Because of its extremely light color and neutral flavor it won't have much affect on the final color or flavor of your beer. Carapils belongs to a category of malts labeled as Dextrine, sometimes Dextrin, malts. We mention this because you might see either of these names in your recipe.
You can steep Carapils in an extract batch but will only get about 20% utilization, or 20% of the goodies of this malt dissolved into your beer. While not as complex as Carapils malt, for extract brewing some brewers prefer to use dextrin powder.
Recipe is another take on B. B had no real body and wasn't smokey/roasted enough. Altering the steeping grains to see if we can get a fuller body and more roasted flavor. Everything else will stay the same as much as possible.
Similar to: Porter (B)
Beer was made with yeast given to the Sudzers by the Gigayeast folks at one of our meetings.
A beer made for Grandma.
Similar to: Citra++ (AO)
The Headquarters club was giving away hops at Clandestine, so this seemed like a good way of using them. Unlike the previous beer, I didn't add dextrose (because I forgot to buy it at MoreBeer and couldn't find it elsewhere), so the OG should be lower than (AO).
Similar to: Citra++ (AO)