Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout BIAB Recipe - Mr. Small Batch Brewer (2024)

I’m excited you’re here! This Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout is one of my favorite recipes that I brew. The way the roast from the barley and coffee come together with the subtle heat from pasilla chiles and sweetness from the cacao nibs and vanilla, this one is a must brew! Let me walk you through my Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout BIAB recipe!

What Makes a Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout?

As they often do, this idea stemmed from a wonderful beer put out by Stone Brewing called Xocoveza. The story behind this beer makes it that much more interesting to myself as a homebrewer. Stone has had annual homebrew competitions, and Chris Banker won the competition with this beer. In 2014, Stone put this beer out commercially, and people loved it so much, it has become a staple that Stone brews annually! How cool is that?

I would not necessarily goes as far as to say that my recipe is meant to be a clone of Stone’s Xocoveza, but it drew much inspiration from this wonderful beer!

The draw of this beer comes from the multiple layers of aroma and flavor stacked on top of each other. Generally what you encounter first in the aroma is the spiciness from the cinnamon and chiles, upon the first drink, cocoa and vanilla shine through without overpowering the palette, there is some subtle heat from the chiles that comes through at the finish but this is balanced well with the roast from the barley and coffee.

How to Brew a Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout

The first step in brewing this beer is starting with a solid base stout. To accomplish this, I like to use a bit more Maris Otter pale malt than 2-row. Maris Otter provides a more fuller palette and some biscuit-flavor to the beer. To get the color and roastiness necessary for a stout, I like to use a small amount of chocolate malt, black patent malt, and roasted barley. The addition of roasted barley, after all, is the main difference between a stout and a porter, right?

Keep the hop bill fairly neutral. Hops are not the selling point of this beer. I use small amounts of Challenger and East Kent Golding. This is a strong stout, so it does require a decent amount of bitterness to keep it balanced.

As with the hops, the yeast character is not where you want this beer to stand out. I prefer to use the classic S-04 for most of my stouts.

Okay, so now we have a great stout, but we need to take the next step to get all the cocoa, vanilla, chile, cinnamon, and coffee notes that make this beer unique.

How to Make a Tincture for Beer

The most efficient and simple way to get these flavors in your beer is by making a tincture. A tincture is simply made by soaking your ingredients in alcohol for an extended period of time. I prefer to use vodka for my tinctures as it tends to be the most neutral.

Step One:

Gather your ingredients for the tincture:

Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout BIAB Recipe - Mr. Small Batch Brewer (1)

Step Two:

Carefully cut open pasilla peppers, take off the stem, and remove the seeds. Cut the peppers into smaller strips/pieces.

Carefully cut open the vanilla bean to expose those tasty insides!

Coarsely grind your coffee. If you don’t have a coffee grinder, you can simply place the measured amount of coffee in a Ziploc bag and crush with a mallet, bottom of a glass, etc.

If you have cinnamon or cassia sticks, I recommend coarsely crushing these as well.

Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout BIAB Recipe - Mr. Small Batch Brewer (2)

Step Three:

Place all ingredients in a container that you’re able to seal. I prefer to use mason jars.

Add vodka until it is just covering your ingredients. I recommend using a light hand with the vodka. You will be adding this alcohol to your beer later, and you likely don’t want your beer tasting like a mixed drink!

Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout BIAB Recipe - Mr. Small Batch Brewer (3)

Step Four:

Wait.

I like to let the ingredients soak for at least one week prior to adding to your beer. If you remember to make the tincture on brew day or even soon after, the ingredients will get a nice soak while fermentation occurs.

Step Five:

Add this to your beer.

Now, this is where there is some debate. Some brewers prefer to add just the liquid portion of the tincture to the fermented beer. Others prefer to add the whole jar, both liquid and solids. My decision is generally based on time. If the tincture has been sitting for at least one week, I like to just add the liquid portion. This is a much simpler and cleaner way of doing it. I feel that the beer itself likely won’t be able to extract too much more flavor from the ingredients than the vodka did if it has sat for 1+ weeks.

However, if your planning was not ideal, and you were only able to let your ingredients sit in the vodka for a couple days, I would recommend adding all of your ingredients and the vodka to your beer. Use a sanitized hop bag to place your solid ingredients in to keep things clean.

Now let’s get to the recipe! This recipe is for a two gallon BIAB batch. It can be scaled up as much as you need to for a larger BIAB or all-grain batch!

Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout Recipe

Stats:

Volume:2 gallons(7.6L)
Predicted SRM50
Predicted IBU63.29
Original Gravity1.080
Final Gravity1.025
ABV- 7.3% (will be higher depending on how much vodka with the tincture you add)

Grain:

2.5lb(1.13 kg)2-row
3.5lb(1.59 kg)Maris Otter Pale
8oz(226.8 grams) Crystal 60L
6oz(170.1 grams)Black Patent
4oz (113.4 grams) Chocolate Malt
4oz (113.4 grams) Roasted Barley
4oz (113.4 grams) Flaked Oats
2oz(56.7 grams) Brown Malt

Hops:

0.75oz(21.3 grams)Challenger (60 minutes)
0.5oz (14.2 grams) East Kent Golding (5 minutes)

Other Additions:

1oz (28.3 grams) Local Honey (30 minutes)
1.1oz (30 grams) Pasilla Peppers
0.42oz (12 grams) Cassia Bark (or Cinnamon)
1 Vanilla Bean
3oz (85 grams) Cacao Nibs
1oz (28.3 grams) Local Coffee
One pinch Nutmeg
OPTIONAL: Peanut Butter (discussed below)

Water:

Reverse Osmosis Water
4 gramsCaCl
1 gram Gypsum

Yeast:

Safale S-04 (1/2 packet)

Directions:

Heat 10 quarts (9.5L) of strike water to 162°F (72.2C). Add brewing salts. Mill the grains and mix with strike water to reach a mash temperature of 152°F (66.7C). Hold mash temperature for 60 minutes. Sparge the grains with 170°F (76.7C) water until you reach a volume of 3 gallons (11.4) of wort. Boil for 60 minutes, following the hop schedule. Add honey at 30 minutes.

After the boil, chill the wort to slightly below fermentation temperature, about 64°F (17.8C). Aerate the wort and pitch the yeast. Ferment at 64-68°F (17.8-20C) for 2 weeks, then cold crash the beer to 35°F (1.7C). Add tincture addition after one week of fermentation. You may also add this at bottling or kegging. Bottle or keg the beer and carbonate to approximately 2.25 volumes of CO2.

Tips:

Add Lactose

Lactose is a non-fermentable sugar. So, unlike the sugars extracted from the grain, and other sugars like dextrose or honey, lactose will not be turned into alcohol by the yeast. Lactose will add residual sweetness and body to your beer. I, personally, am not a huge fan of lactose in stouts, such as ‘milk stouts’, so I left lactose out of my recipe. However, if it suits your fancy, go for it! Add approximately 6oz of lactose if you go this direction.

Add Peanut Butter

If you’re a fan of peanut butter stouts, this recipe lends very well to the addition of peanut butter! I’ve done this a couple times with this recipe, and it is delicious. I made the peanut butter addition optional in the recipe itself as I know not everyone loves a peanut butter beer. However, if this sounds interesting to you, let me explain how I usually like to add it.

How to Add Peanut Butter to Beer

Peanut butter itself is high in oil content. This presents a problem for brewing. Oils destroy your head retention. I have read about some brewers spreading classic peanut butter over a cooking sheet, and dabbing the oil that comes out over a series of days. However, if you’re like myself, you may not have time for this method.

I have had good success with using peanut butter powder. Specifically, PB2 powder seems to have the best flavor. Per each gallon of beer, boil 2.5 cups (236.6mL) of water and add this to 6.5oz (184.3 grams) of PB2 powder to form a slurry. Add this slurry to your beer after active fermentation has subsided.

Thank you for stopping by!

If you are interested in how to homebrew using the brew-in-a-bag BIAB method, please see mypost here.

If you would like to see more small batch recipes like this, please follow thislink.

Mexican Hot Chocolate Stout BIAB Recipe - Mr. Small Batch Brewer (2024)

FAQs

How much cocoa powder to add to stout? ›

For five gallons I add 100 grams of cocoa powder with 10 minutes left in the boil. I had no problems with it settling out in primary. I also add 1 pound of lactose along with the priming sugar at bottling. Or you can add it with ten minutes left in the boil; I've done it both ways, but I prefer to add it at bottling.

How to use chocolate in homebrew? ›

The chocolate can go in at the start or end of the boil, in the fermenter, or even at kegging. There does not seem to be any consensus among brewers as to which is the best stage to add it. My view is that it is best to add it during the boil or at least right at the end while the wort is still very hot.

What does a chocolate stout beer taste like? ›

A chocolate stout is a beer with a noticeable dark chocolate flavor. This flavor is created from the use of darker, more aromatic malt that has been roasted or kilned until it acquires a chocolate color. Harpoon Chocolate Stout is brewed with an abundance of chocolate malt and a touch of chocolate.

Is stout easy to brew? ›

Irish stout is also incredibly easy to brew. With just three grains, one hops, and a nicely attenuative dry yeast, you can turn this around in a couple of weeks if you keg your beer.

What happens if you add too much cocoa powder? ›

That means that too much of it also means a dry-baked good. So to avoid your baked goods from coming out dry, either reduce the amount of flour (by the same amount of cocoa) or increase the amount of liquid in your formula, about 1/4-1/3 cup of liquids per 1/2 cup of powder. It is bitter and unsweetened.

Do you add cocoa powder before or after milk? ›

Many recipes recommend mixing cocoa powder and sugar with a little water before adding the milk, and we found this to be worthwhile. Premixing of the cocoa powder and sugar with milk produced a less flavorful drink. Because the milk fat in cream and milk has such a distinct flavor, it can mask other flavors.

When to add cocoa powder to homebrew? ›

Adding cocoa powder during the boil is the easiest way to ensure it is sanitary, remembering that the later in the boil you add the powder the more chocolate flavour you should get through in your finished beer.

How much cocoa nibs to add to stout? ›

Generally, for a lighter but noticeable flavor, we recommend about 4 to 8oz. of cacao nibs per barrel. For a bolder, more distinct chocolatey flavor, we recommend about 12 to 16oz.

How to get chocolate flavour in stout? ›

Cacao nibs and cocoa powder are arguably the easiest forms to use for brewing. Cacao nibs are cocoa beans that have been fermented, dried, roasted, and hulled: the first steps on the way to becoming chocolate. Coarsely crush cacao nibs as you would specialty grains before use.

What pairs with a chocolate stout? ›

Stouts have a big, bold flavor that requires strong chocolate to stand up to it. Dark chocolates with dark berry flavors go well with these beers. For example, try a dark chocolate with raspberry or cherry flavors.

What's the difference between chocolate stout and chocolate porter? ›

Porters use malted barley and stouts use unmalted roasted barley. This will affect the flavor profiles of each beer. In porters, malted barley is more likely to bring out a chocolatey flavor. It's a perfect balance of malty sweetness and bitter hoppiness and results in a lighter body as compared to a stout.

Do you drink stout warm or cold? ›

If you want to be exact, a common recommendation is to enjoy a stout at around 45 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit. A higher ABV imperial stouts could be at peak flavor between 55 and 60 degrees.

What is the hardest beer to homebrew? ›

The Hardest Styles to Brew
  • Pilsner. “You can't hide off-flavors.” – ...
  • Belgian Tripel. “l*ttle to hide, challenging to brew to its appropriate final gravity.” – ...
  • Irish Red. “Getting the color right.” – ...
  • New England IPA. “Oxidation is hard to avoid with all the hops involved.” – ...
  • British Bitter. ...
  • Sweeter Beers.

What are the disadvantages of stout beer? ›

Disadvantages of stout beer primarily revolve around excessive drinking. These drawbacks encompass addiction risks, cognitive impairments, potential for various chronic diseases including certain cancers plus heart disease along with high blood pressure issues.

How long to leave stout in fermenter? ›

Stout is an ale, however they don't need three weeks in the fermenter. Ales should be finished fermenting in 7 days or less, then give it another few days to clean up and bottle it. Conditioning time in the bottles is fine, although stouts generally improve further with longer ageing periods.

How much cacao powder to add to beer? ›

Too many people want to add 1–2 oz. (30–60 g) to 5 gallons (19 L) of beer like they would for chocolate malt. Cocoa is very low in water extractables. They go up the more you roast the cocoa but 1–2 oz.

How much cocoa powder should I use? ›

A. According to the European Food Safety Authority, the recommended daily intake value is 0.1 ounces (2.5 grams) of high-flavanol cocoa powder. In simple words, you shouldn't consume more than four to six teaspoons of raw cocoa in a day.

When to add cocoa powder to beer? ›

Adding cocoa powder during the boil is the easiest way to ensure it is sanitary, remembering that the later in the boil you add the powder the more chocolate flavour you should get through in your finished beer.

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