As i said, i really love the German wheat beer. I'm looking to make a first try of 5 litter batch using Matza and Pilsner malt, can you help me figuring the grain/water ratio? I dont want it to be too strong or dark.
I was thinking to make it a 60% matza 40% malt, would it be enough to ferment?
And what kind of yeast do you recommend, as matza has a low, close to zero, DP.
Thank you very much
For more Matza character I would raise it to a higher % matza, like in the example I gave before, 65-67% Matza, 35-33% Pilsner (or Wheat) malt.
You should mill or finely pulverize the Matza crackers so the enzymes can get to work on them quickly. I'd treat them as if they were (unmalted) wheat flakes or raw wheat berries. Water/grain ratio 1.5 as usual, maybe a little higher if it turns out a bit too thick. With such a high amount of raw wheat, use 8-16 oz of rice hulls in a mash for a 5 gallon batch to keep the mash lush and help with lautering, or even better, use a voile bag (a piece of voile curtain) in your mash tun or kettle (BIAB), for fewer lauterability issues. Wheat is sticky, gummy.
To
reduce the gumminess during the mash, you could do a step mash incorporating a combined protein/beta glucanase rest at 122F for 15-20 minutes before raising it to your 148-152F saccharification temp.
Or you can go all out and perform a wheat decoction. A link to such a recipe and method is in my profile.
Calculations and recommendations for DP are also in the example I had posted before.
American wheat malt has a high DP, 180 for red wheat, 160 for white. German wheat malt is typically in a lower, 90-120 range.
Use a simple hopping schedule, not to overpower, but to enhance the wheat flavors. From Styrian Goldings, Saaz, Tettnang, etc. to a bit more adventurous Mandarina Bavaria.
Any wheat beer yeast should work, giving you the traditional cloudy appearance. I've used a lot of WY3944 (WLP400), Belgian Wit, for wheat beers. I'd stay away from any Hefeweizen yeast with a (strong) banana flavor profile, as it will likely overshadow the subtle toastiness of the Matzas. Along those lines, you can use any regular clean fermenting ale yeast too.
Pesach Sameach!