Susan Verberg
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- Joined
- Mar 14, 2018
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I am still on my quest on finding a beer without hops that I could say the same about.
I will bottle a bog myrtle, mugwort, ground Ivy beer tonight, brewed with a saison yeast.
The idea was to use a yeast that eats almost all of the sugars so that there is no sugar left for lactos. This beer is promising but I might have used a bit too much of the herbs but let's see how it tastes.
The bog myrtle beer we made was with roasted barley (for a smokey flavor) and bog myrtle, no other herbs. We're trying to replicate historic gruit ale and mugwort and ground ivy are not part of that herb package. Not sure I would personally add those two either, as mugwort can be quite bittering and likely would overpower the bog myrtle flavors? Let me know how that works out.
About souring, gruit ales were made sweet and strong - the high level of alcohol would help preserve it. It would also have a short shelf life - up until the discovery of boiling the hops, ales were only sold and traded locally as they would spoil too quickly. So if you want to use the bog myrtle the way it was back then, it would be high alcoholic, on a wheat beer base (no or low amounts of barley), and sweet...
Proost!