shafferpilot
Well-Known Member
I'll never understand why some get all up in a huff when someone wants to make a really light beer. It IS beer. My suggestion would have been to use the lightest pilsner extract you can find and some rice solids. then bolster the alcohol content with corn sugar (no more than 10% of the fermentable sugar). And stick to an ABV of 4% or less. It's tempting to try and make it stronger than that, but you'll be sorry if you do. You can't get much lighter than that. The hops should be bittering hops only, and use very very little of them. Be prepared to let it sit in secondary for a month or two as it'll take a while for those subtle flavours to mature.
But since you're now making barleywine.... which is quite a switch... I guess it doesn't matter any more.
Do yourself a favor and don't cave the next time a fellow homebrewer tries to beat you with the rheinsgebot. What's the point of a hobby where you don't get to do what you want, and you end up with a product that doesn't even resemble what you wanted in the first place?
But since you're now making barleywine.... which is quite a switch... I guess it doesn't matter any more.
Do yourself a favor and don't cave the next time a fellow homebrewer tries to beat you with the rheinsgebot. What's the point of a hobby where you don't get to do what you want, and you end up with a product that doesn't even resemble what you wanted in the first place?