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Mack and Jacks African Amber clone
One of the reasons that I started homebrewing is this beer. Beautiful Octoberfest like color, great session beer, although the abv is over 5%, I always had at least 4 of them at a sitting. My brother lives in seattle, and after 10 years of waiting for him to send me some in Massachusetts, I decided to make my own. I found this recipe on another site, and didn't see it here, so I thought I post. It's the byo version.
Mac & Jack?s African Amber (BYO, 3-4/2002, p. 18
Extract (with All grain option); 5 gallons; OG = 1.060; FG = 1.018; IBUs = 38; ABV = 5.5%
6.6 lbs Muntons light malt extract syrup
0.5 lbs Muntons light dry malt extract
1.0 lb Munich malt
0.5 lbs crystal 80
0.5 lbs carapils (dextrin) malt
9.3 AAU Centennial hops (1 oz @ 9.3% alpha) for 60 min
6.2 AAU Cascade hops (0.75 oz @ 8.3% alpha) for 2 min
4.2 AAU Cascade hops (0.5 oz @ 8.3% alpha) dry hopping
1 tsp Irish moss
White Labs WLP005 (British Ale) or Wyeast 1098 (British Ale) yeast
0.75 cups corn sugar for priming
Steep crushed malts in three gallons 150F water for 30 min. Remove grains. Add malt syrup and malt powder and bring to a boil. Add Centennial hops and Irish moss and boil for 60 min. Add Cascade aroma hops for last two min of boil.
When done boiling, strain out hops, add the wort to two gallons of cool water in sanitary fermenter, top off with cool water to 5.5 gal. Cool wort to 80F, aerate, and pitch yeast. Allow beer to cool over next few hours to 68-70F and ferment for 10-14 days. Add 0.5 oz Cascade pellets to dry hop your beer for five to seven days, the bottle. Pellet hops work well when dry hopping this beer.
All-grain
Replace extract with 9 lbs British pale malt. Mash all grains at 155F for 45 min. Collect enough wort to boil for 90 min and have 5.5 gal yield.
Decrease Centennial to 0.75 oz. Rest of recipe is same.
I did a few thing different, I couldn't get centennial, so I used 1.5 oz Cascade for the bittering. I added the irish moss at 10minutes. and I used the Wyeast 1056 American ale Instead of the british Ale. That's all they had at the LHBS, I hope it doesn't make that much difference, because I love this beer. Also, I'm not going to dry hop, because, well because I really don't like to, I added an ounce of Cascade at 30 min, and a half ounce of Cascade at flame out. I got an OG of 1.057
Just took a gravity reading, it was more for me to taste it, I just couldn't wait. reading was 1.23 so still a ways to go The taste is definately there, great citrus flavor from the hops, the 1.5 oz bittering Cascade was right on. Not exactly there yet, but enough to spark the memory of this fantastic beer. The Malt was perfect, great balance between the hops and Malt, and when I held it up to the light, it was that great color, reddish amber glow, hiding a deep dark secret. God I can't wait to drink this beer. For all you people out in Washington, you don't know how good you have to to have this beer everywhere.
Just transfered to secondary after 12 days, looked really good, i'll give it another week, then bottle, The fg was right on 1.018, so at least I got that going for me. I tasted it again after the second gravity reading, and it was fantastic, I'm going to carbonate this on the low side, as I remember the cabonation was a little low on tap, so i'm going to use coopers drops, and just use one per bottle.
Bottled it today, looks great, well see in 2 weeks.
Tastes great very close, the only thing that's missing is the yeast, keep that in mind when making this clone, use the british ale yeast. it's very very close, but it's missing the fruity esters that the British ale has. and because of that it's missing that grapefruit, citrus taste at the end that people are always searching for when they taste this beer. When I went to the LHBS that day, they didn't have any, so I went with the american ale, so there was a difference. I will definately make this beer again though, tastes great at room temp, or in the fridge, the mark of a great beer.
I am a Mac & Jacks fan myself and a new homebrewer (first batch almost done with primary fermentation, actually) and am going to try your extract recipe as my next attempt.
I am just a 10 minute drive from the Mac & Jacks brewery and would like to use their African Amber as a starting point for developing my own recipes - being a regular there, I may even try to get some of their yeast to employ - so thank you for the updates, I will keep you informed with how I am progressing.
Please do, I love their beer, and the next time im in seattle, i'm definately going to take a growler home with me, and pull the yeast. My brother is good friends with the owner of the Elysian, and he had no problem giving him everything he needed to make their immortal Ipa, I might even post the recipe here, they have it on their website, but it's a great ipa.
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