Chili peppers?

Mon Feb 27, 2012 5:54 pm

I'm curious about adding chili peppers to an amber ale. Any one have any suggestions?
DJdissapointment
 
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Re: Chili peppers?

Tue Feb 28, 2012 9:45 am

DJdissapointment wrote:I'm curious about adding chili peppers to an amber ale. Any one have any suggestions?

What kind of chili and what is your threshold for heat?
I would probably go with some dried smoked ancho powder and some fresh serrano in that sucker!
But that's just me! :jnj
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snowcapt
 
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Re: Chili peppers?

Tue Feb 28, 2012 10:45 am

The best pepper beer I've had was made with ancho peppers and just enough to barely pick it up in the aftertaste. You don't want it to stand out, just accent and make you thirsty. :aaron

Because I wouldn't want to risk a whole batch, I would probably go with the vodka infusion method and dose to taste at bottling/kegging.
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anday6
 
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Re: Chili peppers?

Tue Feb 28, 2012 3:16 pm

The following method has won me awards:

9 jalapenos per 5 gallons, chopped including seeds and all, soaked in a few ounces of vodka (just enough to cover the peppers) for several hours on bottling/kegging day, then add just the vodka and bottle/keg as normal.

Very simple and very effective.
Dave

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dmtaylor
 
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Re: Chili peppers?

Tue Feb 28, 2012 6:29 pm

dmtaylor wrote:The following method has won me awards:

9 jalapenos per 5 gallons, chopped including seeds and all, soaked in a few ounces of vodka (just enough to cover the peppers) for several hours on bottling/kegging day, then add just the vodka and bottle/keg as normal.

Very simple and very effective.

this is almost exactly how i do it, i use 6 instead of 9 though. have won awards with mine too.
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speed
 
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Re: Chili peppers?

Tue Feb 28, 2012 9:10 pm

I made a green Chili Amber ale about 2 years ago and it turned out fantastic. A bit of green chili flavor and just a touch of heat.

I made my amber ale, transferred to a glass carboy for secondary and then added 6 chilies that I had roasted, frozen, diced, and soaked in vodka.
Dumped in all the chilies seeds and all with the vodka and left it for about 10 days.

This method did seem to kill my head a bit but it was done with an extract batch so maybe this could be aided by a recipe adjustment.
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jlmcgrath
 
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Re: Chili peppers?

Tue Feb 28, 2012 9:24 pm

ive been playing with peppers with my mango habanero ipa im making right now. i tried grilling 3 peppers, freezing and adding them whole for 10 days. not very much if any pepper flavor/aroma. could just be the style of beer that i need more. i just cleaned out 4 peppers of seeds and capsaicin, grilled and froze. i will try adding those in the next couple days and see how that fairs. if all else fails i will do the vodka technique at kegging.
nmber0nestunna
 
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Re: Chili peppers?

Wed Feb 29, 2012 12:28 pm

I find that Habanero has a very clean, mildly spicy heat. I have used it successfully in Saisons. Also, grilling them will remove a lot of the heat, if that's your goal, as does removing the seeds.
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