Sweet Stout homebrew recipes.

Users have created 2693 Sweet Stout recipes on Brewtoad, the best way to create, share, and discover homebrew recipes.

Recipe name Style User Type Color OG FG IBU ABV
very vanilla 'nilla stout Sweet Stout crapypoo1 All Grain 38 °L 1.059 1.017 38 5.5%
Bridin Sweet Stout 150shillings All Grain 30 °L 1.046 1.015 23 4.1%
Candy Sweet Stout npoznic All Grain 33 °L 1.072 1.016 37 7.3%
Sweet Dreams Sweet Stout Andrew Boyce Partial Mash 45 °L 1.065 1.021 32 5.8%
beavers milk stout Sweet Stout doublehaul All Grain 18 °L 1.102 1.026 24 10.0%
Fucker's 1st Milk Stout Sweet Stout Sloke All Grain 53 °L 1.083 1.021 42 8.1%
Milk Stout Sweet Stout Steve Nelms All Grain 39 °L 1.053 1.014 38 5.1%
Egg Nog Bourbon Stout (2012) Sweet Stout theglasscarboy All Grain 42 °L 1.077 1.018 24 7.7%

Sweet Stout style information.

Type Ale
OG 1.044 – 1.060
FG 1.012 – 1.024
IBU 20.0 – 40.0
Color 30 °L – 40 °L
ABV 4.0% – 6.0%

Aroma

Mild roasted grain aroma, sometimes with coffee and/or chocolate notes. An impression of cream-like sweetness often exists. Fruitiness can be low to moderately high. Diacetyl low to none. Hop aroma low to none.

Appearance

Very dark brown to black in color. Can be opaque (if not, it should be clear). Creamy tan to brown head.

Flavor

Dark roasted grains and malts dominate the flavor as in dry stout, and provide coffee and/or chocolate flavors. Hop bitterness is moderate (lower than in dry stout). Medium to high sweetness (often from the addition of lactose) provides a counterpoint to the roasted character and hop bitterness, and lasts into the finish. Low to moderate fruity esters. Diacetyl low to none. The balance between dark grains/malts and sweetness can vary, from quite sweet to moderately dry and somewhat roasty.

Mouthfeel

Medium-full to full-bodied and creamy. Low to moderate carbonation. High residual sweetness from unfermented sugars enhances the full-tasting mouthfeel.

Overall Impression

A very dark, sweet, full-bodied, slightly roasty ale. Often tastes like sweetened espresso.

Comments

Gravities are low in England, higher in exported and US products. Variations exist, with the level of residual sweetness, the intensity of the roast character, and the balance between the two being the variables most subject to interpretation.

History

An English style of stout. Historically known as “Milk” or “Cream” stouts, legally this designation is no longer permitted in England (but is acceptable elsewhere). The “milk” name is derived from the use of lactose, or milk sugar, as a sweetener.

Ingredients

The sweetness in most Sweet Stouts comes from a lower bitterness level than dry stouts and a high percentage of unfermentable dextrins. Lactose, an unfermentable sugar, is frequently added to provide additional residual sweetness. Base of pale malt, and may use roasted barley, black malt, chocolate malt, crystal malt, and adjuncts such as maize or treacle. High carbonate water is common.

Commercial Examples

Mackeson's XXX Stout, Watney's Cream Stout, Farson’s Lacto Stout, St. Peter’s Cream Stout, Marston’s Oyster Stout, Sheaf Stout, Hitachino Nest Sweet Stout (Lacto), Samuel Adams Cream Stout, Left Hand Milk Stout, Widmer Snowplow Milk Stout

Featured Sweet Stout homebrew recipes

Recipe name Style User Type Color OG FG IBU ABV
very vanilla 'nilla stout Sweet Stout crapypoo1 All Grain 38 °L 1.059 1.017 38 5.5%
Bridin Sweet Stout 150shillings All Grain 30 °L 1.046 1.015 23 4.1%
Candy Sweet Stout npoznic All Grain 33 °L 1.072 1.016 37 7.3%
Sweet Dreams Sweet Stout Andrew Boyce Partial Mash 45 °L 1.065 1.021 32 5.8%
beavers milk stout Sweet Stout doublehaul All Grain 18 °L 1.102 1.026 24 10.0%
Fucker's 1st Milk Stout Sweet Stout Sloke All Grain 53 °L 1.083 1.021 42 8.1%
Milk Stout Sweet Stout Steve Nelms All Grain 39 °L 1.053 1.014 38 5.1%
Egg Nog Bourbon Stout (2012) Sweet Stout theglasscarboy All Grain 42 °L 1.077 1.018 24 7.7%