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Prognosis on my WeissBier

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SkewedBrewing

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I popped open my HefeWeisse last night after conditioning for two weeks and was a little disappointed. I was expecting more of the clove and banana flavors that I love from other Wheats but they weren't really to be found in mine... I used an Ale yeast instead of Wyeast Bavarian so that might be it. It was also really, really dark, which will settle out after it sits in the bottle longer.

Has anybody had a similar experience with their wheats? My recipe was really simple, just 6.8 lbs of Wheat and Bavarian Wheat extracts (liquid), Hallertauer (1.5 oz total) and some Ale yeast.

Any suggestions for next time a try to recreate HefeWeissen?
 
I honestly can't say I've brewed a weiss (not really my style), but it's my understand that the flavors characteristic for the style are highly dependent on the yeast used and the temps that it ferments at.
 
yup.. the yeast is VERY important in a hefeweizen (hefe = "yeast", after all).

You can SIMULATE some of those flavors by using an ale yeast at a higher-than-suggested temp, but I don't think that would necesdsarily be a good idea. (I had a batch of IPA that fermented @75°F and had lots of HW characteristics.)

-walker
 
As I understand it, the yeast is the only thing that gives a hefe that nice fruity banana flavor...So without using hefe weissen yeast, you just have a wheat beer.
 
I used hefe weissen yeast for my wheat and it smell banana just as expected. The only unexpected is the color, it looks like organge juice even it's almost three week old. Yours is dark?
 
If you want a true to style Hefe Weizen then you have to use a Hefe Weizen/Bavarian Weizen yeast. :D Anything else is NOT a German-style HW.

For the banana flavor you need to ferment at or above 70F. That does not mean you can't get similar flavor at lower temps, but it does depend on the yeast. Read the yeasts profile to determine if what it does is what you want in the final product.

As for the color getting lighter? I've never heard (of it) or experienced that before.:confused:
 
My Wheat (as it is apparently not a true HefeWeiss sadly) is very dark, like an amber or SNPA. I definitely don't have an Orange juice like hue.

As for the Bavarian Yeast, I was going to use it but being a poor college student I didn't want to spring for the 5.50 Yeast when I had packets of 1.00 ale yeast.
 
I wouldn't be too awful sad about it...an American Wheat can be one helluva good beer. Boulevard Wheat from KC is awesome. As for the color...don't sweat that either. I think it's impossible to get a really light colored beer with extract and partial boils.
 
Man, am I PO'd! I just wrote you this long dissertation of how you screwed yourself while thinking you were saving $$$ - then I got timed out!

The short of it is...if you want to brew a true to style HW, or any other brew for that matter, you just HAVE TO use the appropriate yeast or you will not get the flavor you are aiming for.

Forget about the cost.

For one $5.50 vial of yeast you can use it at least 12 times!

Here's what you do: Make a starter. Split it in half. Brew a batch. Wash your yeast and divide it into 5 separate containers.

Remember, that's only half and it's only the 1st generation.

Try washing and dividing that generation and your cost is down to $0.23.

Imagine the big companies who re-use their yeast for 6 months and many generations.

That comes to just $0.46 per batch for 60 gallons of HW.

If you don't want to make that much you can always exchange some with other brewers in your neighborhood!:D

I'm quitting before I get timed out again...Happy Brewing!:D

ELP: I hear what you're saying about getting light colored beers from extract. I'm on the road at the moment, but when I get home I'd like to send you a few pics of my extract beers if that's OK with you. I'm looking for your opinion/critique. Thanks. Later.
 
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