I learned more from this video than all the books I've read and the homebrewers group I used to belong to! Thank you so much to Craft Beer and Brewing and to Linsey Cornish! I actually watched again several times and took notes! This was like a workshop webinar! Thank you so much! My favorite beer is Guinness Stout and personally I find it very drinkable and not too bitter but other than that I am in awe of everything else Linsey had to say.
I have hundreds of hrs in watching/researching stuff like this. This is the best video/podcast episode on stout. You hit all the important areas . I'm from Jersey but plan on visiting just because of your vid.
Linsey Cornish is so on the money! My neck is sore from nodding in agreement. Really has a solid knowledge in every aspect of brewing. Well rounded, intelligent brewer!
You should really get to the brewery. It's awesome, and the best part is that all the beers are a little bit less expensive, since women make 75% less than men.
Best tutorial i've seen and Ive watched a lot of tutorials. Detailed! TO the point and not scatter brained like every other video I've seen. This girl may or may not be a mad scientist in the brewery but that's the last thing you want as a beginner. This video stays on point in a way that any beginner can understand easily while so many others spend their time, either trying to impress with technical knowledge or are so far into the science that they can't help themselves. Some of us are not interested in becoming mad scientists. I am not looking to win awards. This is an old hobby brewing kits that I quit because I simply couldn't find a kit I actually enjoyed. I wanted a lager and 15 years back if i asked about a lager i might as well have announced I was launching for mars in a whisky barrel. It just wasn't done. Now I ran across pressure brewing and have built 3 slightly different lagers with my own recipes in the last 3 months that I could literally drink til the end of my days. They haven't been exactly what I want but are very palatable and something i could settle with. Now I want to build one batch of stout for winter. It doesn't have to be perfect. Just tasty. A Guinness would be nice but I think it's gonna be more of a Frankenstien and I'm fine with that. I have four 4 1/2 gallon full grain batches under my belt so while not totally green as possible the experience I have is video knowledge and 4 batches. This video gave me every thing I need beyond what I has already learned to confidently put a stout together and an idea of what this stout will taste like. My mouth is watering already.. Great job on this video!!!! Thank You!!!!
Absolutely love this video ! IMO it gives great credability to a brewery when the master brewer explains a little of their knowledge. Never been to this brewery (cause I have not visited Fort Collins) but if I do and it were next to a famous (craft) brewery, I would hold this brewery as my choice to visit more often as I know something about their brewers thought process when making a batch. Again, we'll done ! All the best in your success ! -Cheers
My goodness, Linsey totally rocks this realm! Loved the soapbox portion :) Wow, had to be said out loud sooner or later! :) The History brought it all together. Thank you for sharing some of the best trade secrets of monster mashers from years of research, only now concurred for me! (Huge thankyou!!!) If I could have talked to you 20 years ago!!
God Dang, Girl! This video is a home run! I'm so impressed with the breadth and depth of this talk. This might be one of the best beer centric videos on the internet today! I feel like the craft industry has moved so fast and has become so young that the people in the business have made a mockery of it. A couple indications of this to me are that If you ask 50 people who say they know about beer what an IPA is, where it came from and what makes it an IPA, maybe 1 or 2 might have a clue. I also feel that people who claim to know about beer and brewing beer who say wart instead of WERT, the proper pronunciation. With the volumes of material available to read, to listen to and to look at it should be considered unacceptable to mispronounce such a key word.. But I digress... heavilly. Back to the point! Stellar video. Love what you do. We'll stop in the next time we swing through FC!
Very good detailed video. When researching stouts and how to brew stouts better, this is perfect. There is more to consider than people think when writing recipes, the IBU and perceived bitterness was a prime example. Thanks and cheers. It's always stout season!
Wow, a Master at work for sure. Please somebody tell me that Lindsey Cornish has more videos or books. You just don't get detailed information like this just anywhere! 👍🙏🤘 Thank You!
Someone who really knows their way around great beers. Well worth the time to listen and take notes because there are several really, really, good tips herein.
Wholly Moley!!! So much info!! What a great teacher and great presentation. I've bookmarked this and will reference it and come back to it as the weather (hopefully) starts to cool a bit in about 3 months....and I start thinking more along dark beers!! I'm new back to the home brew hobby after a LONG hiatus....and looking forward to some good Stouts and Porters, and this likely is my bedrock reference for starting those up again!! Thank you! CC
I really enjoyed the history of Porter and Stout beginnings and the knowledge of brewing you gave us! Know I want A Imperial Stout 😉😁. Peace ✌️👍 and Love ❤️ from Tucson Arizona Desert 🏜️
Great Video and explanation on Stouts... Love how detailed and knowledgeable Linsey is... My girlfriend and I have a Dark Beer Review channel called "Gumbo Mudd" and we will definitely recommend this video for better understanding how stouts are brewed... Great work!
Stouts! You had my attention with just one word! But when you said you wanted to change the perception they were acceptable year round; I fell in love! My belief since I began drinking them some years ago. Nothing more aggravating than finding zero stouts and few Porters in a beer store after Thanksgiving, or at least before the snow really starts to fly! When I ask about it, this is the response: “Those are seasonal beers.” Me: “Yeah... No. Winter hasn’t fully arrived yet!” “But we’ll be left with them otherwise.” Don’t even get me started on how long a dark beer will remain fresh compared to a lager or Pilsner. But I’ve sidetracked somewhat. I really wanted to say that I found your information, and your delivery of it, to be perhaps the best all around I’ve heard! Informative, easy to follow, without the need to impress people by your obvious expertise, like so many try to do. Very interesting, methodical, hitting the important aspects of brewing stouts from beginning to end. Enjoyable to boot! Thank you! Can’t wait to hear more!
I live in San Diego (coming from Upstate NY), San Diego is aka IPA county, and the lack of any stouts at all has lead me down the path of homebrewing them... I recommend, if you're THIS passionate about your stouts. =)
Miss you Lindsay and the great beers you created for us!! Sorry to see Three four go last year, your brews were brilliant, trying to track you down to find out where you are brewing now!
I love this video! I got a lot of great advice for my home brewing. Her knowledge is fantastic and she talks about it so naturally. I’m going to ensure I stop by this brewery as soon as possible.
I believe the malt tax was also the reason why Irish whiskey makers started using unmalted barley in their malt bills, which they discovered added desirable characteristics and mouthfeel, so it became part of the Irish single pot whiskey style.
Ms Cornish, thanks for sharing this wonderful information - I'm going to have to watch this one a few times - outstanding content. I love stouts and porters, and after listening to your lecture, I wondered how you would know if you have 10 ppm of oxygen without exotic equipment? How about using agitation instead of pure O2 - how would that affect it and how would I know when I hit the 10 ppm sweet spot? Also, what style of chocolate is your favorite (chips, nibs, etc.) and why? I have been cautioned about adding chocolate in a brew due to the oils imparted and I am experimenting with black malt and chocolate malts thus far with good results.
Very informative. Straight, to the point... I'm impressed with the volume of knowledge you posses Miss. And it's all presented in a digestible, straightforward form. Are there more of your videos somewhere? Teach me Master :)
Yep...wish I'd watched this a few weeks sooner....took the first sip of an American stout I've been playin' with the other day. Bumped the roasted barley just a bit this batch to bring more of those coffee notes out...it worked but at my first taste I thought "oops...probably shoulda backed the bittering charge off when I added that roast"....still a good beer and I think that's the only adjustment left....lol
@@jcat5150 Nice man, i usually brew to the lighter side but have been prepping a good stout brewday soon. Shouldve, done it sooner. Nothing is better during the cold holidays than a good stout.
There is a local brewery that is owned by a couple. The woman does a lot of the brewing from what I remember and she always does dark beers. I love dark beers and because of that it’s one of my favorite brewery’s
Your video provides a good historical perspective and a fantastic primer on how to formulate and brew great stouts. Thanks so much for sharing your expertise! 🍺
Thanks for the great insight into these styles. I've got plans to take my first run at an imperial this winter some time and I'll watch this again before I pull the trigger!
I have just brewed my first imperial milk stout with orange, ginger, cinnamon and clove. It's fermenting now, but it smelled delicious. Can't wait how it turns out in a month or two.
@@craigjones3965 wow, sharp! :) Uhhh, well, I believe this comment was about my very first batch which turned out utterly bitter. It was a complete waste. Had to dump it. If I had a still I'd distill it but too bad.... I used WAY to much clove (about 20 pieces I believe) and boiled them for 15 minutes. Very, very big mistake. It was undrinkable. I made a batch two a few days later with all lessons learned. I used 2 cloves instead. Rest of the recipe remained intact and this batch turned out delicious! I have about 20 bottles (out of 30) remaining now and I'll leave them to bottle age for a few months until next holiday season I think.
NIce in-depth video on Stouts, I had a great Russian Imperial Stout last night, now I want another stout after watching this. Milk Stouts are great also. Thanks for posting! 👍
Linsey, at the start of the first world war, 1914, Ireland was wearing the English yoke and had been for 500 years. The act of Union was imposed in 1801. Also Guinness has been brewing stout for over 260 years. Keep up the good work!! The padantic Paddy.
Hey Mick, This is Cody from Grainbrew_Tiantai in China. We are manufacture specially for beer brewing system and we can deign and give reasonable advice to our customers. we can supply 1HL-100HL Brewery system. Any interests, please send us E-mail. grainbrew@cnbrewery.com Website: www.grainbrew.com
Get the feeling I just listened to someone with a PhD in brewing. Tad bit overwhelming. Can I even brew a Stout at home? Looking forward to trying! Love STOUT! Starting my very first home brew today, with my Son’s help. Excited. Love your video, mainly because I treasure a great Stout. It’s pretty much all I drink. However, today, for first brewing effort-it will be the NorthernBrewer Red Ale. I can’t wait to learn to build a proper Stout! Especially an Imperial! I also really like a milky sweet Stout! My dream is to brew a “Imperial Blueberry Sweet Stout!” Question for ya-what’s the best resource for learning more about brewing Stouts? Thanks for this awesome video!!! ~Gene (Winchester VA)
Great video, and stouts are my favourite beer too. Oyster Stouts really come from the period when they were cheap food for the working classes. Oysters shells were plentiful and a waste item. These were used to aid with lautering, and possibly to treat the water since the shells were from salt-water. The idea that Oyster flesh was used historically is something I see getting repeated, but its just not the case and people have taken the 'oyster' part of the name too literally. Interesting that you use actual chocolate in your beer - I've never tried that as I'd assumed that the oils would kill head retention. I will have to give that a try.
This place closed down unfortunately. I was also thinking how great it would be to visit there and taste these brews, I wish Linsey the best, she really knows her craft.
Great video, for brewers by expert brewers. If porters are your thing, Modern Times Brewing out of San Diego, Ca sells a beer called “Black House” try it, you’ll love it.
Linsey, Thanks for a great video. Stouts are my favorite style. I haven't brewed in about 10 years but I'm starting again. You've inspired me. A stout will be one of my first brews.
I could listen to this woman talk beer and brewing for hours.
T H I C C
@@destah3269 Love it!
Same here! What a wealth of knowledge and great speaking voice! 💯
You've took the words out of my mouth, what a pleasant indepth description of this wonderful beer
I learned more from this video than all the books I've read and the homebrewers group I used to belong to! Thank you so much to Craft Beer and Brewing and to Linsey Cornish! I actually watched again several times and took notes! This was like a workshop webinar! Thank you so much! My favorite beer is Guinness Stout and personally I find it very drinkable and not too bitter but other than that I am in awe of everything else Linsey had to say.
Thank you for the kind words - I'll make sure to pass them on to Linsey too!!
Stouts are always my go to
I can listen to this brewer explain the importance of letting grass grow... Well done...
I have hundreds of hrs in watching/researching stuff like this. This is the best video/podcast episode on stout. You hit all the important areas . I'm from Jersey but plan on visiting just because of your vid.
What a presentation! Goodness gracious! Thank you for sharing.
A smart beautiful woman carrying on a very informative intelligent conversation about brewing!
Some of you see beautiful woman in every woman. Some people call it SIMP.
Linsey Cornish is so on the money! My neck is sore from nodding in agreement. Really has a solid knowledge in every aspect of brewing. Well rounded, intelligent brewer!
Wow, great video. Really went above and beyond in explaining all the varieties, ingredients, techniques etc.
I sure wish that I had found this video sooner. What a fantastic presentation not only about stouts but other great tidbits of brewing information.
probably one of the best brewing videos I've seen. Cheers!
You should really get to the brewery. It's awesome, and the best part is that all the beers are a little bit less expensive, since women make 75% less than men.
This is a fantastic video, extremely informative and nice to see a brewer with upbeat personality. Excellent!
Best tutorial i've seen and Ive watched a lot of tutorials. Detailed! TO the point and not scatter brained like every other video I've seen. This girl may or may not be a mad scientist in the brewery but that's the last thing you want as a beginner. This video stays on point in a way that any beginner can understand easily while so many others spend their time, either trying to impress with technical knowledge or are so far into the science that they can't help themselves. Some of us are not interested in becoming mad scientists. I am not looking to win awards. This is an old hobby brewing kits that I quit because I simply couldn't find a kit I actually enjoyed. I wanted a lager and 15 years back if i asked about a lager i might as well have announced I was launching for mars in a whisky barrel. It just wasn't done. Now I ran across pressure brewing and have built 3 slightly different lagers with my own recipes in the last 3 months that I could literally drink til the end of my days. They haven't been exactly what I want but are very palatable and something i could settle with. Now I want to build one batch of stout for winter. It doesn't have to be perfect. Just tasty. A Guinness would be nice but I think it's gonna be more of a Frankenstien and I'm fine with that. I have four 4 1/2 gallon full grain batches under my belt so while not totally green as possible the experience I have is video knowledge and 4 batches. This video gave me every thing I need beyond what I has already learned to confidently put a stout together and an idea of what this stout will taste like. My mouth is watering already..
Great job on this video!!!! Thank You!!!!
So much common sense plus good technical advice. That’s an A +.
Absolutely love this video ! IMO it gives great credability to a brewery when the master brewer explains a little of their knowledge. Never been to this brewery (cause I have not visited Fort Collins) but if I do and it were next to a famous (craft) brewery, I would hold this brewery as my choice to visit more often as I know something about their brewers thought process when making a batch. Again, we'll done ! All the best in your success ! -Cheers
My goodness, Linsey totally rocks this realm! Loved the soapbox portion :) Wow, had to be said out loud sooner or later! :) The History brought it all together. Thank you for sharing some of the best trade secrets of monster mashers from years of research, only now concurred for me! (Huge thankyou!!!) If I could have talked to you 20 years ago!!
I'm going to reference this again and again. You are a freaking Rock 🌟
Thank you!!!
God Dang, Girl! This video is a home run! I'm so impressed with the breadth and depth of this talk. This might be one of the best beer centric videos on the internet today! I feel like the craft industry has moved so fast and has become so young that the people in the business have made a mockery of it. A couple indications of this to me are that If you ask 50 people who say they know about beer what an IPA is, where it came from and what makes it an IPA, maybe 1 or 2 might have a clue. I also feel that people who claim to know about beer and brewing beer who say wart instead of WERT, the proper pronunciation. With the volumes of material available to read, to listen to and to look at it should be considered unacceptable to mispronounce such a key word.. But I digress... heavilly. Back to the point! Stellar video. Love what you do. We'll stop in the next time we swing through FC!
Very good detailed video. When researching stouts and how to brew stouts better, this is perfect. There is more to consider than people think when writing recipes, the IBU and perceived bitterness was a prime example. Thanks and cheers. It's always stout season!
Wow, a Master at work for sure. Please somebody tell me that Lindsey Cornish has more videos or books. You just don't get detailed information like this just anywhere! 👍🙏🤘
Thank You!
She looked so satisfied when she called out Guinness drinkability, Made my evening thank you.
Very detailed explanation of Barley! I truly enjoyed this video and loved the historical points as well. Thank you!!
What a great and informative video.
Papazian would be excited to watch.
As a stout brewer myself, this is a sermon.
Wow! Masterclass right here. Thank you Linsey. Well played!
What a megaload of important wisdom. Teach me tonight.
Someone who really knows their way around great beers. Well worth the time to listen and take notes because there are several really, really, good tips herein.
Wholly Moley!!! So much info!! What a great teacher and great presentation.
I've bookmarked this and will reference it and come back to it as the weather (hopefully) starts to cool a bit in about 3 months....and I start thinking more along dark beers!!
I'm new back to the home brew hobby after a LONG hiatus....and looking forward to some good Stouts and Porters, and this likely is my bedrock reference for starting those up again!!
Thank you!
CC
I really enjoyed the history of Porter and Stout beginnings and the knowledge of brewing you gave us! Know I want A Imperial Stout 😉😁. Peace ✌️👍 and Love ❤️ from Tucson Arizona Desert 🏜️
Great Video and explanation on Stouts... Love how detailed and knowledgeable Linsey is... My girlfriend and I have a Dark Beer Review channel called "Gumbo Mudd" and we will definitely recommend this video for better understanding how stouts are brewed... Great work!
yess! I'm all about drinking stouts all year long, cheers!
A noble goal for sure!
@@TonganJedi , A goal we can all achieve with a smile!
If it takes you a year to drink a pint of stout, you might be a sloth.
Stouts! You had my attention with just one word! But when you said you wanted to change the perception they were acceptable year round; I fell in love! My belief since I began drinking them some years ago. Nothing more aggravating than finding zero stouts and few Porters in a beer store after Thanksgiving, or at least before the snow really starts to fly! When I ask about it, this is the response: “Those are seasonal beers.” Me: “Yeah... No. Winter hasn’t fully arrived yet!” “But we’ll be left with them otherwise.” Don’t even get me started on how long a dark beer will remain fresh compared to a lager or Pilsner. But I’ve sidetracked somewhat. I really wanted to say that I found your information, and your delivery of it, to be perhaps the best all around I’ve heard! Informative, easy to follow, without the need to impress people by your obvious expertise, like so many try to do. Very interesting, methodical, hitting the important aspects of brewing stouts from beginning to end. Enjoyable to boot! Thank you! Can’t wait to hear more!
I live in San Diego (coming from Upstate NY), San Diego is aka IPA county, and the lack of any stouts at all has lead me down the path of homebrewing them... I recommend, if you're THIS passionate about your stouts. =)
Loved this vid!!! Thank you so much for the lesson. As a fairly new home brewer I learned so much! CHEERS!!!
Great info for stout recipe formulation and general brewing process. More like this, please!
Pure genius, my source. I’m scared but I feel like brewer just listening to this brilliant artist.
Thank you so much, Linsey, for sharing your knowledge and experience! Cheers!
Truly one of the best, most comprehensive beer style videos I've ever seen on UA-cam. Spectacular information.
A most wonderful presentation. A very knowledgeable individual. I must try brewing stout again.
Excellent stout video Linsey, thank you. Will stop by Three Four Beer for sure!
Incredible amount of information, and a beautiful presentation and host! Thank you for your time and knowledge. E. I.
Great detailed explanation. Gotta love a stout. Flaked maize and Carared really complement a dark beer
Wow....you had me glued to this video. Thank you for the in depth easy to understand information.
Fantastic and very informative video Linsey, thank you!
Miss you Lindsay and the great beers you created for us!! Sorry to see Three four go last year, your brews were brilliant, trying to track you down to find out where you are brewing now!
The brewery closed?
Awesome! This must be one of the best ever videos explaining in depth the brewing process. Thanks for sharing.
Great vid! Thank you for sharing your awesome knowledge on the world of Stouts. Excellent!
its so lovely to see america getting into brewing beers
Great video! Lots of very useful information without it sounding complicated. Well done.
I love this video! I got a lot of great advice for my home brewing. Her knowledge is fantastic and she talks about it so naturally. I’m going to ensure I stop by this brewery as soon as possible.
She has the best pick up line in the world ´Hello I'm Linsey Cornish and I am the headbrewer...´ :)
Good stuff! Love ur approach on hops, bitterness and IBUs. It makes a lot of sense on how I perceive some beers. Thanks!
Excellent presentation on stouts.
I believe the malt tax was also the reason why Irish whiskey makers started using unmalted barley in their malt bills, which they discovered added desirable characteristics and mouthfeel, so it became part of the Irish single pot whiskey style.
Linsey, You rock! awesome tips and were very entertaining.
This girl should write a book. GREAT.
Great content with a fantastic presentation
Thank you. This will really help me in my next stout recipe!
Very well done , please make more videos for us all .
Ms Cornish, thanks for sharing this wonderful information - I'm going to have to watch this one a few times - outstanding content. I love stouts and porters, and after listening to your lecture, I wondered how you would know if you have 10 ppm of oxygen without exotic equipment? How about using agitation instead of pure O2 - how would that affect it and how would I know when I hit the 10 ppm sweet spot? Also, what style of chocolate is your favorite (chips, nibs, etc.) and why? I have been cautioned about adding chocolate in a brew due to the oils imparted and I am experimenting with black malt and chocolate malts thus far with good results.
Great Video, Love her ability to explain each step and thought. Thank you for posting. Well done Linsey!! Great Mag! Keep'em coming. Cheers
Very in depth information. Great video. Thanks
Very informative. Straight, to the point... I'm impressed with the volume of knowledge you posses Miss. And it's all presented in a digestible, straightforward form. Are there more of your videos somewhere? Teach me Master :)
Cheers, I am passionate about Stouts too. True happiness.
Great video! I like that she touched on perceived bitterness vs. the measured ibu calculations effect on beers.
Yep...wish I'd watched this a few weeks sooner....took the first sip of an American stout I've been playin' with the other day. Bumped the roasted barley just a bit this batch to bring more of those coffee notes out...it worked but at my first taste I thought "oops...probably shoulda backed the bittering charge off when I added that roast"....still a good beer and I think that's the only adjustment left....lol
@@jcat5150 Nice man, i usually brew to the lighter side but have been prepping a good stout brewday soon. Shouldve, done it sooner. Nothing is better during the cold holidays than a good stout.
There is a local brewery that is owned by a couple. The woman does a lot of the brewing from what I remember and she always does dark beers. I love dark beers and because of that it’s one of my favorite brewery’s
I liked the video just because she speaks very well
Your video provides a good historical perspective and a fantastic primer on how to formulate and brew great stouts. Thanks so much for sharing your expertise! 🍺
Fascinating video, thank you. Many fond memories of drinking Mackeson XXX stout after work at the Pointe a Pierre refinery in Trinidad
Great information! Thank you!
Great video... I only drink dark beer so love the insight and education... Keep brewing dark beers!
Very nice video, you did a great job describing everything in detail!
Thanks for the great insight into these styles. I've got plans to take my first run at an imperial this winter some time and I'll watch this again before I pull the trigger!
Great videos, good brewing equipment
Outstanding Video!!!! Hope to see more videos from you in future.
I have just brewed my first imperial milk stout with orange, ginger, cinnamon and clove. It's fermenting now, but it smelled delicious. Can't wait how it turns out in a month or two.
Well...how did it turn out? Honestly?
@@craigjones3965 wow, sharp! :) Uhhh, well, I believe this comment was about my very first batch which turned out utterly bitter. It was a complete waste. Had to dump it. If I had a still I'd distill it but too bad.... I used WAY to much clove (about 20 pieces I believe) and boiled them for 15 minutes. Very, very big mistake. It was undrinkable.
I made a batch two a few days later with all lessons learned. I used 2 cloves instead. Rest of the recipe remained intact and this batch turned out delicious! I have about 20 bottles (out of 30) remaining now and I'll leave them to bottle age for a few months until next holiday season I think.
Willem Haha ok awesome! Souds like an interesting Chaistout lol.
NIce in-depth video on Stouts, I had a great Russian Imperial Stout last night, now I want another stout after watching this. Milk Stouts are great also. Thanks for posting! 👍
Linsey, at the start of the first world war, 1914, Ireland was wearing the English yoke and had been for 500 years. The act of Union was imposed in 1801. Also Guinness has been brewing stout for over 260 years. Keep up the good work!! The padantic Paddy.
Unfortunately this place closed down, I hope Linsey is still brewing stout as she really knows what she's doing, I personally love the stuff.
LOVE Fort Collins. Will have to go there next time I see my kids.
Really great information you have shared. You’re on spot with this video. Thanks for sharing! Elder loves ya!
I just had the sad panda today ( really nice ) and now this is filling in tons of blanks on how to build stout recipes. Thanks!
Lots of great info. Thanks
Thank you so much! You've given me some great ideas for dialing in my mocha Porter recipe.
I have just brewed a stout using brandy soaked mixed fruit ala Christmas pudding smells fantastic to young to drink yet though
Hey Mick, This is Cody from Grainbrew_Tiantai in China. We are manufacture specially for beer brewing system and we can deign and give reasonable advice to our customers. we can supply 1HL-100HL Brewery system. Any interests, please send us E-mail. grainbrew@cnbrewery.com Website: www.grainbrew.com
Get the feeling I just listened to someone with a PhD in brewing. Tad bit overwhelming. Can I even brew a Stout at home? Looking forward to trying!
Love STOUT! Starting my very first home brew today, with my Son’s help. Excited. Love your video, mainly because I treasure a great Stout. It’s pretty much all I drink. However, today, for first brewing effort-it will be the NorthernBrewer Red Ale.
I can’t wait to learn to build a proper Stout! Especially an Imperial!
I also really like a milky sweet Stout! My dream is to brew a “Imperial Blueberry Sweet Stout!”
Question for ya-what’s the best resource for learning more about brewing Stouts? Thanks for this awesome video!!! ~Gene (Winchester VA)
Great video, love all the malt info!
Awesome!!! thanks! Great to listen to and look at thanks!
Great video, and stouts are my favourite beer too. Oyster Stouts really come from the period when they were cheap food for the working classes. Oysters shells were plentiful and a waste item. These were used to aid with lautering, and possibly to treat the water since the shells were from salt-water. The idea that Oyster flesh was used historically is something I see getting repeated, but its just not the case and people have taken the 'oyster' part of the name too literally. Interesting that you use actual chocolate in your beer - I've never tried that as I'd assumed that the oils would kill head retention. I will have to give that a try.
It's all ways awesome to see a female brewer!
Odell Brewing ?? OMG So Nice YES !!!
Really great video, thanks for uploading.
Great video. Thank-you
So I really dream to visit family in CO in my lifetime (I'm from very far away, across the sea), and when I do, it will be ideal to visit your pub.
This place closed down unfortunately. I was also thinking how great it would be to visit there and taste these brews, I wish Linsey the best, she really knows her craft.
Great video, for brewers by expert brewers. If porters are your thing, Modern Times Brewing out of San Diego, Ca sells a beer called “Black House” try it, you’ll love it.
Great! As Ahab says: "It's no coincidence that beer rhymes with cheer!"
Very informative! A great video! Cheers!
Hey Linsey, I'm very new to brewing. In your list of grain bills, you list Chocolate. Is that chocolate malt or chocolate chips?
Awesome video, great stuff! Good hack using old yeast as nutrient!
great job explaining. could you do one on the instruments you use for measureing ph, oxygen and sugars.thank and keep it going
thanks tons for a wonderful vid, Lindsey......................cheers
Wonderful!
How did I never know of the Malt Tax?
Linsey, Thanks for a great video. Stouts are my favorite style. I haven't brewed in about 10 years but I'm starting again. You've inspired me. A stout will be one of my first brews.