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Czech Lagers - Grain Selection

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BugAC

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Apr 25, 2011
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Ordering ingredients for my next 2 beers. Plan to brew a Czech Amber Lager and a Czech Pale Lager (pilsner). I'm debating on which base grain to use for the recipe. For both, in the past, i've used Floor Malted Pilsen Malt and Czech Prostejov Pilsen Malt, both with good success. I've been reading up on Hana Heritage Malt by Crisp and was intrigued with this as well. I do a hochkurz decoction mash for most of my lagers.

Those that have brewed a bunch of Czech style lagers, what is your preference between the 3.

Weyermann Floor Malted Pilsen - Slightly undermodified malt
Czech Prostejov Pilsen
Crisp Hana Heritage Malt
 
Ordering ingredients for my next 2 beers. Plan to brew a Czech Amber Lager and a Czech Pale Lager (pilsner). I'm debating on which base grain to use for the recipe. For both, in the past, i've used Floor Malted Pilsen Malt and Czech Prostejov Pilsen Malt, both with good success. I've been reading up on Hana Heritage Malt by Crisp and was intrigued with this as well. I do a hochkurz decoction mash for most of my lagers.

Those that have brewed a bunch of Czech style lagers, what is your preference between the 3.

Weyermann Floor Malted Pilsen - Slightly undermodified malt
Czech Prostejov Pilsen
Crisp Hana Heritage Malt
Any one of those malts would be perfect. Just go with the freshest, highest quality malt you can get if you go with a non-domestic maltster. My preference would be Weyermann Floor Malted Bohemian Pilsner malt, 90% , 5% Carafoam, 5% Munich II (no detoction). Won two awards, one Best of Show in 2022 with that recipe.

My advice would be to go with the Bohemian from Weyermann, Munich 10% (or less), and single detoction if you're comfortable with the process. Focus on the yeast and hops. I went with Imperial Urkel, one of the Pilsner Urquell strains, allegedly. Worked great! Used Saaz and Sterling in combination rather than strictly Saaz. Those two hops in combination played very nicely together, the sum of which was greater than each of them standing alone.
 
Thanks for the advice. I went ahead and placed my order. I going with the floor malted weyermann for the czech amber and trying out the Hana crisp for the pale lager. Using Urkel for both beers. I'm using all Saaz for the amber and Tettnang and Saaz for the pilsner.
 
Thanks for the advice. I went ahead and placed my order. I going with the floor malted weyermann for the czech amber and trying out the Hana crisp for the pale lager. Using Urkel for both beers. I'm using all Saaz for the amber and Tettnang and Saaz for the pilsner.
Should work out very nicely. If you ever have the urge to experiment and go off script a bit (maybe a split batch) I'd encourage you to try a Saaz/Sterling combo. Obviously it's not "traditional" but the Sterling re-enforces much of what makes Saaz, well, Saaz, while also bringing in some additional herbal and grassy notes. I got the idea from a pro brewer friend who used it in a Czech Pilsner he'd brewed for his brewery's annual anniversary beer one year. It did not disappoint.
 
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