I am a big fan of session beers that capture a style but have less calories and alcohol. I think more breweries should brew session beers.
I wanted an American Brown Session Ale. So I decided to shrink a recipe and see how it turned out. I am ecstatic. This beer has a lot of brown ale character with 1040 OG, 4.1% ABV, and 130 calories. I love this beer.
Taste: starts with a mild chocolate flavor. Flavor ends with good dose of citrus and a lingering very mild (pleasant) bitterness. Dry finish.
0.75 oz Cascade (6.8%) @ 60
0.25 oz Cascade (6.8%) @ 15
1 whirlfloc tablet @ 15
1 oz Zythos (10.9%) @ flame out
1 pkg. US-05 yeast @ 64F
Mash at 150F for 1 hour.
Potential improvements: this beer might be improved with some Carapils/carafoam or other malt to increase the body. Might also just increase the mash temp. Also, I subbed pilsner malt because I was nearly out of 2-row. Using all 2-row might be better.
Increase the mash temperature. A LOT. I mash my Session beers (both hoppy and sweet) at 162, otherwise they end up too dry. IMO, Mash temperature increases don’t affect the sweet/bitter ratio very much. Adding crystal type malts (Cara-anything) will increase the sweetness.
American mild is an oxymoron! That’s just not how 'merica does things! But it needs to change!
Nice recipe but IMO it needs more hops and a less attenuative, yet still American, yeast. Maybe WLP041?
You mean “that’s not how 'merica overdoes things.” ;D
Seriously though, I think the recipe looks great (it’s actually quite similar to a brew I do once in a while).
I really wouldn’t change any of the ingredients or ratios. I agree that it would probably be better though with a yeast other than S-05.
If you’re using dry yeast, I’d be more inclined towards something like S-04.
It’ll still be an “American Mild” because you made it in America. 8)
Agreed. Since the gravity is so low you can even get away with using something like WY1968 even if you’re not set up to make a starter. I don’t know why “American” has come to mean “no yeast character”.
The first thing I will do to decrease attenuation is increase the mash temp. But changing yeast is a good option too.
Re: needing more hops. Beersmith put the IBU at 22.6. I wanted to make sure I didn’t over do it with such a small gravity. With more finish gravity I think you could support more hops.
let’s remember, Mild is the opposite of Old not the opposite of strong. so in that sense, given that we are still a pretty young nation I would say that an American mild is perfectly appropriate.
Should have read this before posting pretty much the exact same question. But I want to get even lower, 3 to 3.5 ABV.
And I also did mis-use mild as opposed to stale. But I’m sure you know what I meant.
I made a second batch of this beer with some changes.
Major change: fermented with Danstar Windsor. OG 1043. SG 1018. ABV 3.3%. Mash temp was 152F.
I thought with those numbers I would have a nice full bodied mild. But actually, the beer tastes very thin/watery.
I think I will try WLP002 next time.
The other change was using English Chocolate malt. That plus the Windsor yeast give this beer a more English taste than I wanted.
Edit: on rereading the thread there a few other good yeast choices for next time suggested. I want something more attenuative than Windsor (and cleaner) and less attenuative than US-05.
I am not surprised. While Windsor doesn’t attenuate very well at all, it TASTES like it does and makes for a very watery beer. Not the thing you’d want in an American mild.
Yeah, WLP002 or maybe WLP004 will get you the low attenuation and fuller body that you want. And if you ferment really cool around 60 F, both of these will make a relatively clean tasting beer as well.