My Bavarian Hefeweizen not like Paulaner Hefeweizen - How come?

Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum

Help Support Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

cootr_brn

Active Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2008
Messages
36
Reaction score
0
Location
Kyle, Texas
Caveat - Very first beer brewed

I have a couple of questions about how this beer turned out.

My beer fermented in the primary for one week, in the secondary for two weeks, and has been bottled for three weeks. The beer tastes good and I am happy but I noticed a difference between my beer and a Paulaner Hefeweizen.

First - My beer is much darker - does anyone know why this is?

Second - My beer has a sweeter taste - does anyone know why this is?


Any thoughts or comments?


Here is the recipe I used
Base grain:
- ½ lb. Carapils
Specialty grain:
- ½ lb. German Pilsner Malt
Malt:
- 7 lbs. Wheat Liquid Malt Extract
Hops:
- 1 oz. Spalt Pellet Hops
Yeast
- White Labs Hefeweizen Ale WLP300

- Starting the Brew -
In a 20 quart or larger stainless stockpot, bring 2.5 gallons of water to 155°F and turn off heat.

Soak the base and specialty grains, occasionally dipping the grain bag like a tea bag, in the hot water for 15 minutes

After 15 minutes remove the bag and let excess water drip out. Once the bag has dripped almost all of the water out, discard the grains and return the heat until boiling.

Add the malt extract
Stir constantly to dissolve the malt extract.
Return heat to the mixture once dissolved, stirring occasionally.
Heat the mixture to boiling

Adding the HOPS
- Add the bittering hops and set your timer for 60 minutes
-- ¾ oz Spalt
- For the last 5 minutes add the aroma hops for the last 5 minutes
-- ¼ oz Spalt

After the boil
Cool the wort to 80°F
Pitch the yeast
 
Your beer is darker because extracts tend to be darker than using all grain, all things being equal. The sweetness from malt is generally countered with the bitterness in hops. It's possible you didn't get as much out of your hops as you could have.

The sweetness could also be from fermentation temperatures (I see you pitched your yeast at 80, that seems a bit high...), differences between the extract and what Paulaner uses, etc. Your yeast is also different from Paulaners as well. I've found it's very difficult to exactly match a commercial beer- you can come very close, and even better maybe- but a perfect match is very tough.
 
The extract is your answer. The yeast pitching temp did not cause it.

One thing you can do to minimize the darkening is to add some of the extract late in the boil like the last 15 minutes. This will minimize the caramelization of the extract.

The sweetness has to do with the amount of unfermentable sugars in the extract. You have no control over that unfortunately. It all depends on the way the extract was produced. Try a different extract next time. Different products will have different characteristics.

One last thing, you can't steep pilsner malt. It is a base malt and needs to be mashed. Steeping it at best may give you very minimal flavor contributions. More likely it will just leave undesirable starches in your beer which can shorten the shelf life and appearance, not a big deal in a hefe of course.
 
Yep...LME is always darker than advertised. Want a lighter color brew? Switch to DME and read up on Late Addition brewing.

Too sweet? Under hopped or over malted, take your pick.

Spalt hops tend to be light in the AAs. What were the AA% of the hops?

Also, Hefe Weizens are only bittered. Holding some back for a second addition was a no-no.
 
If you're like I was when I started, you're probably going to want to brew something else entirely for your first few batches, just to keep trying new things. When you eventually do want to do another hefeweizen, do the same recipe but make two changes:

1) Use all the hops at the beginning, as h99 said.
2) Only put in a couple pounds of the extract at the beginning of your boil. Then, at the 15 minute mark (45 minutes in), take the pot off the heat, stir in the rest of your extract, bring it back to a boil, then start your timer again for the last 15 minutes.

This will make your beer (somewhat) lighter in color and also up the bitterness you can get out of the hops, making it less sweet.
 
Thanks for all the feed back - you guys are great.

I will start looking into late addition brewing as I will definately brew this recipe again.... with a few changes.
 
The only other thing would be did you use a starter for your yeast? I would recommend getting a starter going with your next batch so as not to stress out the yeast too much either.

Secondly I would make sure that you're not mistaking sweetness (which could result from hop under-utilization or under-attenuation) for your hefe yeast characteristics. I know when I homebrewed my bavarian hefe it was really dominant in the banana phenols

Congrats though on the brew, it sounds delicious!
 
I brew extract Hefe constantly, my first batch was too sweet I blame high fermenting temps. What I do now is a little different from what you 've got going on. Try Hallertau Hops 1.5 Oz @ boil, 1oz @ 40min. I use Crystal 10L Grain 12 oz, also I split the extract half dry/half liquid. I also pitch my yeast real cold like 60. I've gotten a darker color a couple of times I blame it on over boiling the extract before the hop additions(drinking while brewing). Anyway, my neighborhood and I (8 of us drained a keg that night) love my Hefe, it beat Paulaner in a blind taste test on New Years, for more complex flavoring. But your technique looks perfect
If you want the full recipe Pm me.

Hefe Lovers Unite :tank:
 
Was your FG on point? If for some reason you had a stuck ferm. it could lend to the sweetness. You may also try dropping the German pilsener malt and only using the carapils for a body boost. I would also think higher ferm temps would lead to a drier brew, not sweeter. Unless the temp was so high the yeast stopped fermenting. And you won't get an exact Pauliner with late hops, but I personally love to dry hop half my hef batches with something European, making possibly one of my favorite homebrews. I hope you get your hef where you want it because it is a great homebrew style that can be easily and volumously made. I did a ten gallon batch on thanksgiving, in two carboys. Since then I have re-pitched three batches(5 gal apiece), one being a weizenbock, all of them all-grain. An AG hef recipe costs about 13 dollars at current prices, and one ounce of a higher alpha Euro hop can stretch to three or four brews. I'm rambling, love hef, good luck sir.

PS- There is a great extract Pauliner clone on this site that I used for my first hef, and it turned out very close, only fresher than the real stuff. It's probably in the recipe section but I don't recall the writer unfortunately. Very simple recipe.
 
Just as a late follow-up to this, I picked up some Spalt hops tonight at AHS that had an AA of 2.6 percent. That's low for the variety, based on every reference I've seen, and would certainly explain the sweetness.
 
Hakker pshorr clone is...

6# Wheat DME
1oz Hollertau (4.5-5%AA)(60 min)
White Labe heffe yeast 14 days @ 70deg

in your recipe, Carapils will add color also.
 
Also, minus the specialty grains the OP's recipe was 100% malted wheat extract. I'm not too familiar with weizens, but I don't think they use 100% malted wheat in their recipes. Although, for it to be a weizen you need at least 50% malted wheat.
 
FWIW, "wheat" LME/DME is actually only (generally) 50-65% wheat...
 
Did you add water after the boil to make it to 5 gallons? If so you are probably not getting 100% from your hops. I just learned from a class that doing a boil with less water reduces what you can get out of your hops. This would coincide with what you are saying about your brew being sweeter then expected.
 
Did you add water after the boil to make it to 5 gallons? If so you are probably not getting 100% from your hops. I just learned from a class that doing a boil with less water reduces what you can get out of your hops. This would coincide with what you are saying about your brew being sweeter then expected.

Since he posted this issue over 5 years ago, I'm pretty sure he isn't particularly concerned about a partial boil vs a full boil today.
 
Back
Top