DrinkNoH2O
Well-Known Member
I cracked one of these open last night after about 2 weeks in the bottle. Fantastic - my best hefe yet.
I cracked one of these open last night after about 2 weeks in the bottle. Fantastic - my best hefe yet.
Subbing American wheat malt for German is not going to affect this recipe at all. Might change the color and malt profile just a hair but unless you did a side by side comparison you wouldn't notice the difference.
I think I fermented too cool at around 68. Don't seem to have a lot of banana flavor or clove. Kinda seems watered down is the best way I could put it.
IPAAAA said:Yup. I was expecting umm I guess a thicker mouth feel if that makes sense. t is still very good but maybe I just havent had a commercial hef lately so I could tell the difference.
SteveSD said:I brewed this on Sat 1/29 but used WLP380 Hefeweisen IV yeast instead of the WLP300; I've gotten less "banana bomb" when I used 380 in the past. This is about my 8th all-grain batch, and I've been getting lower OG than expected when grinding my grains at the LHBS, so this time I sent the grains through their mill twice. I did use rice hulls to avoid a stuck sparge. My OG came in at 1.060, higher than expected. I put 5.25 gallons (including starter) in the carboy, then put the carboy in the ferm chamber at 68 degrees. I did use a blowoff tube instead of an airlock.
Yesterday morning there was a pretty thick layer of trub at the bottom of the carboy (maybe as much as 1/2 gallon), and only a thin layer of krausen on top. Temp of the carboy was at 68. I was at work for 24 hours so did not check again until today. This morning there is so much blowoff that probably a pint of wort/beer went into the blowoff pitcher, and the carboy temp now reads at 72. All the trub is just churned into the beer (this is my first batch in a carboy instead of a bucket so I never got to see that before).
My questions:
Given that the endothermic activity of the fermentation has increased the temp of my carboy, am I going to get too much ester production?
Is there any way to end up with 5 gallons of beer with this recipe? Seems like by the time it's done fermenting and the trub resettles I will have only about 4 1/2 to 4 3/4 gallons to go into the keg. I used a 6 gallon carboy but seems like more wort would just mean an even messier blowoff.
Will I still be able to wash and harvest my yeast with so much trub? I've reused this yeast before, but that was with an extract batch using hopped extract, so I had no hop pellet residue or other trub to deal with.
Thanks in advance for any info.
Hey Ed, I have been searching for this online for about an 90 min so i thought i would ask the expert. What is the difference between using wheat berries and wheat malt? Is the wheat malt easily converted and the berries not so much? I use wheat berries as an adjunct in a beer of mine and love the nice wheaty taste they lend. what would happen if i used unmalted wheat?
Ceedubya said:Not sure if this has been asked and answered here already (I read most of it) but here goes: I plan to make this as one of my first all grains this month but need to bottle instead of keg. I have the ability to keg, but this one will need to be bottled as it is for a friend and we are brewing and bottling at his house 2 hours away.
anyways, any suggestions for bottling? If I don't want to use corn sugar for priming what are my alternatives? Since there is supposed to be yeast still in suspension, is there danger of of bottle bombs? do you need to cut back on the amount of sugar used for priming? when serving should it be swirled to put some of the yeast back into suspension or will it have enough already?
Don't want to sound stupid, but I have never made this style of beer before and don't want any surprises, especially at my freind's (who also happens ot be my boss) house!!
If you want to be traditional, brew another batch on bottling day and add some of that wort to your beer at bottling.
Or you could save some wort, and use that.
Or use corn sugar or dme. I think dme would suit you well.
No risk of bottle bombs due to yeast, its the sugar content that's important there.
And yes, serve mit hefe (with yeast)
Good luck!
Also you might to use even more sugar to carb as hefe should be carbed higher.
I use beer smith to calculate how much dme to add, and carb to 3 volumes.