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Christmas ale base beer?

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drunken_snail

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Hello

I am from Australia a few mates and i have been talking about making a xmas beer for next july.

Most breweries nearly all breweries don't do Christmas beers in Australia.

I have checked out a few recipes on here with the spices. I suppose the beers are created off and idea rather than modifying a base beer.

What approx base beer would you suggest.

The two beers that we have in mind are spiced versions of I think it was a Scotch Ale and the other was an imperial wheat.
 
Most spiced christmas beers are based on old ales/winter warmers, cause that was the british tradition. Weizenbock is another option. Pretty much as long as its alcoholic, malty, and amber to dark, you are good to go.
 
Personally, I'd go for a dark saison. Saison yeasts can give off great spicy phenolics especially when fermented at lower temps. These could go great with traditional xmas spices
 
How bout an English Barleywine, maybe with fruitcake spices like ginger.
Maris Otter would be a great base malt for something like this.
 
Traditionally old ales, barleywines. You can think about some of them as strong dark milds.
 
My Brrr Clone would turn out to be a good base, I think. The recipe link is below:

Brrr Clone

It's a deep red, and very rich/malty, together with some good hop aroma. Strong too. If this type of beer doesn't float your boat, I'd shoot for a porter or a pumpkin beer with christmas spices switched out in place of the pumpkin
 
Saison you say. never tried to brew a darker one before.

Completed six brews this year 4 have been saisons of various types but not darker.

I will keep this in mind.
 
I bet you would do well with Biermuncher's Black Pearl porter as a base for building a christmas ale. I made it according to the original recipe last christmas and it was very festive ;) You could have some fun adding some spices and other adjuncts to it.
 
dark saison. Saison yeasts can give off great spicy phenolics especially when fermented at lower temps. These could go great with traditional xmas spices

i like the way you think m00ps!

i used lots of 2row, oats, and 2 big cans of pumpkin mixed into the strike water. and rice hulls. that orange glow is spectacular. i was thinking to try some munich or whatever but i don't wanna darken it at all if possible.

pretty sure i used honey as well. might as well throw some table sugar into the boil. i usually add simple sugars during primary fermentation but i didn't want to dry this out too much.

spice-wise, avoid cinnamon. use .5 tsp each of ginger, nutmeg, and ummm i forget the other one. but no cinnamon. and if you can, give it at least 2 or 3 months in secondary for the flavors to meld. the longest you can age it in secondary will pay off in spades, specifically for a spiced ale.
 
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