7 day grain to glass hefe

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Wheatmeister

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Brewed last Saturday, pitched a big starter of 3068, kegged and force carbed Friday night, and enjoyed with friends on Saturday. Great great summer brew, my dog was enjoying the day also.

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What was your FG? Did you cold crash for a few days before racking? It looks like there is still yeast in suspension.
 
It actually looks like it has flour in it. I don't know...does that affect the flavor? I hate to be a ******, but it doesn't look appetizing.
 
Hey I love it, to each his own. The flour doesnt affect flavor when minimal amounts are added, simply for haze retention.

The recipe uses 3068 so it's a real big banana/clove german hefe..
 
That's what it's all about; if you like it that's all that matters. When you said it was ready in 7 days and it looks that cloudy; the only thing that comes to mind is that the yeast hasn't dropped out o suspension and it's still green. Pictures can be deceiving though.
 
I've heard of "7 days-grain-to-glass" hefewiezens, never done one. I've done a few hefes now and I love them. In my experience, 7 days is pushing it unless you happen to really like the flavor of young, yeasty beer with lower abv. I found for my personal taste, I can get a good hefe in 10-14 days. I go 6 days primary fermenting at the higher temp range of the yeast (WL300 @ 70F) cuz I love the banana :ban: flavors, then I secondary for a 4 days at 60F-65F, then I prime the keg for 4 or 5 days, (a week is best) and cold crash and pour off the yeast.

Pic Below: This is the first drinkable pour after I purged the yeast from the keg. Some folks might consider this hazy but it's still delicious. It's thicker and hazier than a typical hefe at this point but I don't mind it so much, I know the next pour will be a bit cleaner and by the next day it will be just about right. I'd rather drink it than throw it away.

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That looks great hopster, who cares what others would consider ideal, if you enjoy thats all that matters. Looks damn good to me. I have a taste for young hefe's..:mug:
 
Hefeweizen yeast is very low flocculating. It almost ALWAYS remains in suspension. Go to Germany and get a fresh Hefe. They're magical. Below is a pic of one I made last year. It too was 7 days grain to glass.

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Yeah LOW not non-existent. Some will stay in suspension but if racked too early it'll have way too much yeast for even a hefe.
 
These are inspiring photos. I have made two hefes so far and the second was a remake because I think I messed up on the first one and the other is still in the fermenter. Anywho, the first one is extremely hazy and I left it in primary for more than 14 days...
 
I think I will have to give this 7 days business a try. The worst that happens is that I have to leave it in the keg for another few days to settle out more..
 
This is why I bottle my hefes. I haven't tried kegging a hefe yet, but from my time living in Germany, after pouring most of the beer over into a glass, you swirl the last couple ounces to pick up the yeast off the bottom and pour it over the head.

Hefes are one of my favorites along with Koelsch (from when I lived in another part of the country) and I absolutely wouldn't want a clear hefeweizen or hefeweissbier, etc.
 
I'll agree with thumbs up for haze, but 11 days to bottle has worked out for me. Then you gotta wait, but swirling the yeast back into your glass is the way to go.

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Hefeweizen yeast is very low flocculating. It almost ALWAYS remains in suspension. Go to Germany and get a fresh Hefe. They're magical. Below is a pic of one I made last year. It too was 7 days grain to glass.

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curious - what recipes are you using to get the much lighter colour?
 
Heckler - are you using a extract recipe? That could be it. AG hefe's should be pretty light, if you use extract try the late addition method to minimize carmalization and keep it as light as possible
 
I'm confused....why would one add flour to a hefe? I've never had one clear even after a few months in the keg.
 
My hefe is in primary still, strong sulfur smell still, how does yours taste good after 7 days? I used same yeast wyeast weihenstephan as you

Edit: that post sounds like I'm dogging your beer lol I'm not, I meant it as saying "how did u get rid of the sulfur smell quickly" not "I bet your beer taste like ****" lmao
 
This was my first All-grain beer. 12 days to glass. Sorry for the hazy photo, the Iphone lens is scratched.

It was tasty (my friends drank 6 gallons in a few days)

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-Eric
 
My hefe is in primary still, strong sulfur smell still, how does yours taste good after 7 days? I used same yeast wyeast weihenstephan as you

Edit: that post sounds like I'm dogging your beer lol I'm not, I meant it as saying "how did u get rid of the sulfur smell quickly" not "I bet your beer taste like ****" lmao

Not sure, It really ws good though. In all honesty it was better about a week and even 2 weeks later from a balance of flavors perspective..
 
Female that would be ok...male he better slow up with some cash.. :tank:

I don't worry about the cash, home brew is relatively cheap, and they are all eager to help brew more. I didn't turn away donations when I bought the 1/2bbl of DFH 90minute, but didn't care if I didn't got them either. It's all about the fun with friends.

-Eric
 
My hefe is in primary still, strong sulfur smell still, how does yours taste good after 7 days? I used same yeast wyeast weihenstephan as you

Edit: that post sounds like I'm dogging your beer lol I'm not, I meant it as saying "how did u get rid of the sulfur smell quickly" not "I bet your beer taste like ****" lmao

What is your batch size, OG, how much yeast did you pitch, at what temp have you been fermenting?

There could be many reasons for what you're experiencing. If you under-pitched your yeast, it may take longer to complete fermentation. If you are fermenting very cool, it'll be slower. If you transferred to a secondary, you may have remove it from all the yeast that is necessary to clean up the byproducts of fermentation, thus leaving off flavors in the beer.
 
barrooze said:
What is your batch size, OG, how much yeast did you pitch, at what temp have you been fermenting?

There could be many reasons for what you're experiencing. If you under-pitched your yeast, it may take longer to complete fermentation. If you are fermenting very cool, it'll be slower. If you transferred to a secondary, you may have remove it from all the yeast that is necessary to clean up the byproducts of fermentation, thus leaving off flavors in the beer.

5.5-6 gallon batch
OG: 1.050
Pitched one swelled up pack of Wyeast Weinhenstephan (3036?) So 100B cells
Fermented in a cooler full of 65*F water
Grist was 70% wheat 30% munich I
Decoction mashed with rests at 145 158 and mashout/sparge at 170

The wyeast website says it produces a lot of sulfer and it did, stunk my whole fermentation room up lol but I've heard the yeast clean this up when left in primary for 3 weeks, mine is close to one week old airlock activity is over, could be slightly fermenting still altho active fermentation seems over
 
Sounds like you should be ok. I recommend allowing the fermentation temp to ramp up to low-mid 70s and then hold it there for a few days. This will allow the yeast that's still active to clean up the by-products and remove the sulphur smell. I ramp the temp up on every batch I do towards the end of fermentation to help clean up the beer. Works great. :mug:

Also, next time you brew, make sure you use Mr. Malty's Pitching Rate calculator. Plugging in your info, you needed 193-210B cells to properly ferment your batch.
 
Sounds like you should be ok. I recommend allowing the fermentation temp to ramp up to low-mid 70s and then hold it there for a few days. This will allow the yeast that's still active to clean up the by-products and remove the sulphur smell. I ramp the temp up on every batch I do towards the end of fermentation to help clean up the beer. Works great. :mug:

Also, next time you brew, make sure you use Mr. Malty's Pitching Rate calculator. Plugging in your info, you needed 193-210B cells to properly ferment your batch.

I don't disagree with anything you say, but I don't like calculating pitch rates. I've never heard of a downside to overpitching (esp for a hefe) other than an initial blowoff. Under pitching is a problem.
Solution = healthy starter. It has always worked fine for me.
 
Oh yeah I know, I got a stir plate and make starters, but I was told underpitching will help ester production and overpitching will kill all ester production
 
I agree that stressing the yeast slightly can aid in ester production, and you can do that by slightly under-pitching. Pitching only half the amount of yeast recommended will affect fermentation rate. You may not have enough yeast to fully ferment the beer, or clean up the beer at the end of fermentation. Just an FYI from my experiences. :)
 
barrooze said:
I agree that stressing the yeast slightly can aid in ester production, and you can do that by slightly under-pitching. Pitching only half the amount of yeast recommended will affect fermentation rate. You may not have enough yeast to fully ferment the beer, or clean up the beer at the end of fermentation. Just an FYI from my experiences. :)

That's true, I hooked up my blow off tube and really didn't need it, never had a blowoff form, maybe next one ill do a 1.25-1.5L Starter
 
I have had a Hefe clear up in the keg and it loses the yeast flavor. Took the keg out, swirled it a bit, perfect again.

7 day Hefeweizens are awesome. I have made several myself, even fermented at 62 degrees.

Eric
 
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