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Old 06-05-2009, 05:52 PM   #1
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Default American Tripel experiment

I think im going to go loosely by the Belgian Tripel guidelines and toss american ingredients/character into it. Hopefully I will achieve something unique. Here are my thoughts.

Orange American Tripel

Malt Bill:

80% - 2 Row (considering a 50/50 split with marris otter for a little more malt character.. but thats not too american )
10% - Crystal 40 (target is to end up with 5 srm.. may need to change this)
10% - something to lighten the body.. flaked wheat perhaps (possibly corn)

Additional Sugars:

Wildflower Honey

Hops:

Cascade - 60/20/10/5 and dryhop additions. (More Hop flavor/bitterness than usual for a regular tripel)

Spices:

Fresh Orange Zest
small ammount of ground coriander
possibly a couple cloves in the secondary (depends on what temp i want to ferment at)
Possibly 1-2 vanilla beans in the secondary

Im targeting an original gravity around 1.080 ish

I am thinking of using SafALE-US 05 for a clean fermentation and let the
spicy flavor come from spices and not the yeast.

Fermetation temp im targeting 65-68, 2 weeks primary, 4 weeks secondary
and bottle condition. Then age for 2-4 months.


anyone have any thoughts on this?


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Old 06-05-2009, 06:05 PM   #2
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looks like a PA or IPA to me. Maybe you should try an American Wheat yeast...
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Old 06-05-2009, 06:07 PM   #3
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Looks delicious
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Old 06-05-2009, 06:10 PM   #4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Poobah58 View Post
looks like a PA or IPA to me. Maybe you should try an American Wheat yeast...
It is pretty close, but I want a lot of flavor to come from the spices.. im thinking about some black peppercorns too. I think with all the spices that I want to stick in it .. it wont really fit in the IPA / PA catagory
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Old 06-05-2009, 06:20 PM   #5
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Consider black pepper, cumin, and some star anise. Jack that baby up.

I'd pitch at 65*F and ramp up to 80*F to get some esters from the yeast, too.
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Old 06-05-2009, 07:19 PM   #6
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Maybe instead of Cascade you could do a US Saaz aroma addition/dry hopping.
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Old 06-10-2009, 12:26 AM   #7
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there are a number of belgian IPAs out there that are basically this same idea. I had a Houblon Chouffe the other night that was basically a hopped-up (with american hops) tripel. it does use the belgian yeast though.

(personally I think that's pretty much what makes the tripel a tripel, the yeast - so I'd call this a spiced IPA or something like that; but it sounds interesting regardless of what you call it)
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Old 06-10-2009, 01:11 AM   #8
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I gotta agree with ericm. If you want to call it an American tripel, make it with largely American ingredients but ferment it with a Belgian yeast. That's what makes a tripel a tripel. Otherwise, call it a spiced PA.


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