Yes I do...
It's 12.8lbs Pilsner
1.6lbs Munich Malt (2row)
1.6lbsCandy sugar
1.8oz hallertauer mittelfruh
.4oz styrian goldings
.8 chzech saaz
same yeast
adjust the grain bill to your efficiency and such...
I followed this recipe but used 13 lbs belgian pilsner and 1 lb light dme to fill in for lost efficiency. Turns out i did not need the dme and my og was 1.10. Used 1 wlp500 in a two stage, 2 ltr starter on stir plate. In 14 days my fg was 1.012. Very tasty, i just put it on keg this morning. Im letting this one sit at least a month. Its a great, huge beer.
Could you explain how you made the 2L starter? I am going to buy my yeast tomorrow and start my starter![]()
Boil 1 qt of water with 1/2 cup DME for 15 mins. Cool to pitching temp and toss in your yeast. Put on your stir plate (if you have one) or give it a good swirl every time you walk by if you don't have a stir plate. Do this for 2 days. Put in the fridge for 24 hours to crash. Decant and pitch slurry into 2 quarts of water boiled with 1 cup DME and reapeat.
There is a lot of info on this board for how to do a starter but here is what i do. I measure 1700 ml of water and heat to boiling. I meaure about 150 grams of light dme and stir that into the boiling water and boil for 15 minutes. Im aiming for about 1500 ml of wort at the end of the boil to 150 grams of dme for a wort thats around 1.04 og. I then cool the whole thing in an ice bath (stir with sanitized spoon while in the ice bath) until the temp drops below 70 f. I pour into a 2 litre glass growler and pitch the yeast. Maintain good sanitation with everything that happens after the boil. I then drop a 1 1/2 inch stir bar into the growler, put a foam stopper into the growler nech and spin as fast as it will go without throwing the stir bar for about 24 hours at a cool room temp. Then i put the growler in the fridge for 24 hours. Remove from fridge and carefully drain off all except about 1 inch of wort keeping the yeast settlement at the bottom of the growler. Then i do the whole thing again. This gives me a pretty consistant big yeast throw. It sounds like a lot of work but once you get your system its pretty easy. You need a stir plate and stir bar (eBay) a two litre glass container you can put a breathable top on, make sure you sanitize everything that comes into contact with the wort after the boil stops. When using liquid yeast making a fat starter is one of those things i consider essential.
Not sure what you mean by priming before bottling. If bottling you'd add table sugar, honey, corn sugar, or whatever other sugar you want to use to your bottling bucket, rack in to the bucket, and bottle.
Most calculators say to carbonate tripels from 3-3.5 vols
Finally made a batch of this. Unfortunately my version is a horrible attempt due to the lack of ingredients. I had to substitute all Pale LME for the Pilsen LME and didn't add Amber LME (I used a bit more Pale LME and a bit more candy sugar)
It tasted good so I am very excited to see what my 1214 yeast will do!
I had an OG of 1.076 due to adding too much cold water into my bucket
1 month to go :rockin:
12 days later and my gravity is at 1.014
Can't wait to see what it will finish at in the next couple weeks
Nice, I think thats about at what mine batches finished at... Couldn't get it any lower.
How long did you wait until you bottled? What was your OG?
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I keep hearing everyone talking about making huge 2 liter starters on this brew. My LHBS (well respected in my area for their knowledge/experience) keeps touting underpitching belgian yeast strains to help bring out the esters/phenols that are characteristic of the style. About a year back now I brewed the extract version of this with a single smack pack of WY1214 (the equivalent of wlp 500 in the OP's recipe). I let it go 2 weeks in primary, racked to secondary for another week and then bottled. It took slightly longer than normal to carb up naturally but I attribute that to the fact it was approx 9.5% abv. The beer turned out tasting great so I guess what I'm getting at is that with this particular yeast I don't think I would waste the time, effort and money to make a huge starter. If the yeast stalls on you for some reason you could always toss in a vial of champagne yeast to finish it off.[/QUOTE
I got the same advice and have done the same thing every time I make this beer and it has turned out good. Might make a big starter next time to see the difference.
I had originally made this twice with extract, the last batch was all grain. It seemed to me that the all grain had a way hotter alcohol taste to it even though it is the same abv%. It has been bottle conditioning now for 6-7 months and is stating to dissipate. getting way better with age.
Bottled this today, left it for 6 weeks and couldn't get below 1.014. Excited to try a bottle in a few weeks!