I’m not sure I would go with a Brown profile. I recommend a Black profile since it has less sulfate and I find that sulfate doesn’t play well with Roast.
I’d look at how the overall beer color relates to Bru’nwater profiles. Martin gives a color range for each. Or I’d use brown balanced and not worry about it.
Good point. A dry water profile with a drying roast character is probably going to be excessive and unbalanced. The main takeaway that readers should have is that sulfate and roastiness can produce an overly drying beer.
I agree with Sean on that recipe…but hey, if you want it roasty to the point of acrid, then go for it. I had a nice American Porter last night and the brewer at that brewery indicated that he used more modest levels of the dark malts. It was dark and slightly roasty with a gentle caramel fullness that balanced nicely and made it eminently drinkable…but that might be too mellow for what you are after. Definitely water dependent - he used a little baking soda in his RO water with very very
light sulfates.
Thanks It’s actually for Jamil’s Chocolate Hazelnut Porter (which one best of show), so it also has unsweetened Cocoa Powder and Hazelnut Extract. Along with 6.20% Crystal 40L & 6.20% Crystal 80L. FG is 1.019 at 6.20% ABV. I’m assuming the residual sugars help balance out the % of dark/roasted malts being used? Sounds lush!