• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Looking for a simple German Crystal Weitzen recipe!

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

JOHN51277

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 11, 2005
Messages
1,014
Reaction score
16
Location
Orlando, FL
I have a buddy who sometimes brews with me and he has been wanting me to make a Crystal Weitzen like he used to drink the hell out of in Germany when he was stationed over there. I want to get an all grain recipe together, and ordered and surprise him next time he comes over and helps brew. I want to let him pretty much brew this himself and go through the process. Then I am going to send most of it home with him once bottled.

I have done some searching but cannot come up with a solid recipe. I am under the assumption that it is just a regular hefeweitzen with Crystal malt in there? Am I correct?
 
Nope, far from it. Kristallweizen is just filtered Hefeweizen. So unless you can filter post fermentation, you cant make it....

I would suggest brewing a normal Hefeweizen, with a lot of vorlaufing and a healthy dose of irish moss. (perhaps using a english yeast for the esters??????)
 
I lived in Bavaria for 9 years...and only had 1 Kristall, just to see what it tasted like. Been drinking HWs ever since...and that was 1975. :rockin:

The Kristall here means "clear" as opposed to cloudy (mit hefe).

I can get my HWs clear without filtering. I just use a secondary.

If you can set your secondary in a fridge for a week or so it'll get clear also. This is called crashing.

Just brew a HW as you normally would then use my advice here.

It'll be as close to a kristall as you can get without filtering. ;)
 
But then you will have the problem of the unflocculant hefeweizen-yeast. It is easy to pour a half a glass of clear bear, but it starts to get cloudier from there, even if you leave one to half an inch behind.
 
But on the brighter side, most Germans (and mr Homebrewer 99) dislike the Kristallweizen and prefer the Hefeweizen so you might be doing your friend a favour by introducing him to a proper Hefe. (But that would require step mashing to build up ferulic acid which is a precursor for the 4-Vinylguajacol phenols (clove aroma))
 
But on the brighter side, most Germans (and mr Homebrewer 99) dislike the Kristallweizen and prefer the Hefeweizen so you might be doing your friend a favour by introducing him to a proper Hefe. (But that would require step mashing to build up ferulic acid which is a precursor for the 4-Vinylguajacol phenols (clove aroma))

I have no idea what you just said, but ok!:rockin:
 
I lived in Bavaria for 9 years...and only had 1 Kristall, just to see what it tasted like. Been drinking HWs ever since...and that was 1975. :rockin:

The Kristall here means "clear" as opposed to cloudy (mit hefe).

I can get my HWs clear without filtering. I just use a secondary.

If you can set your secondary in a fridge for a week or so it'll get clear also. This is called crashing.

Just brew a HW as you normally would then use my advice here.

It'll be as close to a kristall as you can get without filtering. ;)

+1
That's the ticket.

Use this recipe and follow the instructions above.
 
But then you will have the problem of the unflocculant hefeweizen-yeast. It is easy to pour a half a glass of clear bear, but it starts to get cloudier from there, even if you leave one to half an inch behind.
Knowing how to pour is the trick. Even a commercial HW comes out of the bottle clear until you rouse the yeast by swirling, table roll, whatever your technique to get the foamy yeasty head.

With enough time (1-2 weeks) in the secondary and cold crashing there won't be any unfloculated yeast...it'll be clear...and in your case we will RECOMMEND using Irish Moss (something we'll never do with a real HW).

All of my HWs become clear in the secondary (I do not cold crash) so I suck up some of the yeast into the keg/bottling bucket to get it cloudy again. It makes for a much smoother, tastier beer with less yeast.

OP: Check out my HW recipe to the left < < < under Recipes.
 
Knowing how to pour is the trick. Even a commercial HW comes out of the bottle clear until you rouse the yeast by swirling, table roll, whatever your technique to get the foamy yeasty head.

With enough time (1-2 weeks) in the secondary and cold crashing there won't be any unfloculated yeast...it'll be clear...and in your case we will RECOMMEND using Irish Moss (something we'll never do with a real HW).

All of my HWs become clear in the secondary (I do not cold crash) so I suck up some of the yeast into the keg/bottling bucket to get it cloudy again. It makes for a much smoother, tastier beer with less yeast.

OP: Check out my HW recipe to the left < < < under Recipes.
Same here. If I use Irish Moss/Whirlfloc and give my HWs plenty of time to clear (and settle in the bottle), I can pour the entire thing out until the last 1/2 inch without any yeast. This is with WY3068 Weihenstephan strain.
 
Another trick I have succesfully used is to, when transfering to a secondary, at the same time, pitch in a highly flocculating yeast. I had hoped this would help pull down the German wheat yeast, and it did just that.
 
Back
Top