Thunder_Chicken
Well-Known Member
To my taste nothing is a better treat than a Lindemans Gueuze Cuvée René, and I have been wondering about what I could do make a good sour with at least some elements of Lindemans Gueuze Cuvée René.
I have never made a sour of any sort, so I don't know whether this is overly ambitious or not. I've read through these forums and haven't quite figured out the "procedure" to make such a sour. Here is the little that I think I know:
The things I definitely don't know:
I have never made a sour of any sort, so I don't know whether this is overly ambitious or not. I've read through these forums and haven't quite figured out the "procedure" to make such a sour. Here is the little that I think I know:
- The base beer is low hopped, low IBUs with aged hops as the bugs don't do well with the alpha acids.
- The dregs of commercial sours can be used to innoculate the bacteria (and yeasts?).
- It takes long periods of time for the sour to fully develop (years).
- Temperature variations are beneficial in helping the sours develop.
The things I definitely don't know:
- Do you brew and ferment a "normal" beer first, then add the bacteria, or do you just toss it all in? Or both, depending on the intended result?
- There are commercial sour starters - are they mixtures of yeast and bacteria, or just the bacteria?