Decrease your Pilsner slightly and replace it with a mix of Vienna and Munich 10L, or Vienna and Belgian biscuit malt.
If you have the capacity for step-mashing, consider this ...
Multiple decoction steps can be time consuming. Use a two-step mash starting at 145F, then add the Vienna/Munich grains to the mash at the second step, raising the temperature to 154F. Lauter until clear, then proceed on.
Hey guys, any ideas to bump some bread taste on my american wheat without covering/dominating hops?
Maybe some rye or munich but it will ruin the color a bit.
Pils/Wheat 50/50%
Centennial/Simcoe with whirlpool
US05
So 5% can be enough in this ~20 IBU wheat one.... Thanks for the infoI brewed a pale ale a few weeks that included 10% Vienna and 4% Victory, if I remember correctly. Bready malt character hits your right away, even with aroma hops present.
So 5% can be enough in this ~20 IBU wheat one.... Thanks for the info![]()
If you are in the mood to throw a speed bump in your brew day, go for decoctions but rhys333 is 100% correct. I'd try adding vienna and victory before trying to get too creative on the brew process. I'm pretty sure I can taste victory at 5%.I think you'd need more than 5% Vienna to get what you want. Probably 15-20% if you want the bread notes to come through. I think the 4% additional Victory really helped boost the bread character in mine.
Hey, why Vienna not from the beginning, just to mash it with full body?
So how much will be fine to be balanced, i changed recipe with just 5% Vienna - dont know if just 5% will be part of the taste...
(im almost always use step-mashing)
Pils/Wheat 50/50%
I only tried 3 other producers, not any caramel or smoked wheat which i have here. Anyway its a good idea to find the best one for that profile.I usually go for about 55% wheat, the more wheat you use, the more wheat flavor you'll get in the beer. I also do 6% honey malt, I find the honey adds a complimentary flavor to wheat.
You're also just mentioning wheat generically, not a specific type of wheat. My LHBS usually has about 4 types of wheat at any given time, each with different flavor profiles. I too am a fan of the wheat bread-y flavor and found one particular wheat to be far more representative of that flavor than the others they had. I can't recall the name, but my suggestion is to taste some of the wheats available and pick the one that best represents the flavor you're looking for. I literally just eat some of the grains when I'm selecting them.