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Agave Wheat
Recipe
4 lbs. Flaked Wheat 4 lbs. 2-Row 1 lbs. Agave Extract 8 oz. Flaked Oats 1 Whirlfloc @ 15 min 1 oz. Tettnang @ 60 min 0.5 oz. Tettnang @ 5 min 1 oz. Sweet Orange Peel @ 5 min 0.5 oz. Coriander @ 5 min Wyeast Belgian Witbier 3944 Protein Rest @ 122 F for 20 minutes Mash @ 148 F for 60 minutes ABV: 5.9% Notes Pitch the yeast into both the starter and wort warm, around 80 F to develop spicy phenolics. 3944 isn't strictly required, but I like the spiciness you get. 1056/1010, or S-05 would work fine, but you'd lose some of the flavor. Use the darkest Agave you can find - it's more flavorful. Alternatives Add the agave right before bottling for a bigger taste, but be aware how it'll affect bottle conditioning, if that's what you're doing. Also, to compensate for the OG hit, add an extra 0.7 lbs of 2-row and Flaked Wheat. Your FG and ABV will be a little different (higher FG, lower ABV). Make the orange peel and coriander into a spice tea, and add into the bottling bucket. I personally prefer this method, as it keeps the flavors around longer. Alternately, do both the boil and spice tea. |
I brewed this this afternoon. Decided to use the coriander and orange peel in the boil for the last 5 minutes and left it in the kettle while I chilled the wort. Smelled good, hoping it turns out kind of close to Breckenridge's agave wheat. Thanks for sharing!.
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Glad you decided to use it! It's not a complicated recipe by any means, but quite tasty. More of a summer beer for me, but good beer is good anytime.
Don't get thrown off by the green tint, though. Maybe the Tett I used was really fresh or something, but the wort looked like it belonged on St. Patty's day for a few weeks. |
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To be honest, I think there is something missing in this recipe... Although, I am not a big wheat beer drinker so I couldn't tell you what it is. Something to darken it maybe, and add some sweetness. I wanted to try to replicate the Breckenridge Agave Wheat, which is much darker than this beer. But this with an orange slice in it is just fine :)
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Yes, it's definitely a dry beer. I was going to go simple with it. I could see maybe adding a small (< 10%) amount of C20, or maybe some Victory. You could also, of course, raise the mash temp. Going up to 156F gives you an FG of 1.011.
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great looking recipe! question about the primary, do you think a 14 day primary would be ok? what would the differences be, if any to keep it for 21 days, even if it's done fermenting?
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It'd probably be fine. I'm a proponent of three week primaries with no secondary, but with a good yeast starter and appropriate fermentation temperature, it would probably be fine.
Is there any specific reason you're wanting to shorten the primary? |
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