Recipe Type: Extract with Grains

Bend Brewing’s Hophead Imperial IPA clone

FREE

Bend Brewing Company’s 2007 GABF winning imperial IPA. The secret to a good Imperial IPA is dry-hopping.  It can make or
break this style. It is very important to have a huge aroma that leads you into the beer, complementing the inherent bitterness.
Tonya Cornett, Brewmaster


Gruit Ale

FREE

Leave the hops in the freezer for this brew session…welcome to the adventurous world of Gruits!


Celebration Beer

FREE

Something akin to the historic Burton ale, this Celebration Beer recipe has plenty of support from the hops to balance out the beer to provide a strong and complex, full-bodied beer.


Dortmunder (German Export)

FREE

A pale lager named after the city it originated in.


American Amber II

FREE

Here is a nice, subtle version of an American Amber Ale that is good to pair with foods.


American Amber I

FREE

This version of American Amber Ale is moderately hopped and balanced by a moderately high gravity.


Gold Finger (James Blonde Barleywine)

FREE

This unconventional Barleywine is light in color but non-compro­mising in strength. It could also be called James Blonde.


Doughboy Draught

FREE

Late WWI American-style Pilsner



Salmon Creek Brewing Brother Larry’s Belgian clone

FREE

In 2012, Salmon Creek Brewing’s founders Ana and Larry Pratt sold their business. Today Old Ivy Brewery and Taproom stands in its place. Here is a recipe from Salmon Creek’s archives for their Belgian Dubbel.


Fredericksburg Brewing Co.’s Porter clone

FREE

Fredericksburg Brewing Co.’s Porter clone (5 gallons/19 L, extract with grains) OG = 1.054  FG = 1.012 IBU = 15  SRM = 23  ABV = 5.5% Ingredients 3.3 lbs. (1.5 kg) golden


Corsendonk Monk’s Brown Ale clone

FREE

Corsendonk is an Abbey beer, not a Trappist beer. This designation means the beer is brewed not at an abbey, but under license from — or at least in the style of — a Trappist monastery. In the case of Corsendonk, the name is taken from an Augustine priory that produced beer from the 1600s until the 1780s. Whether the Augustine brothers brewed anything remotely resembling modern Corsendonk is debatable, but they have licensed their name to the beer since 1982.
– Brouwerij Bios, Ertvelde


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