Great thread. Subbing for this summer when I "garage" my saison.
Did you ever "garage" a saison over the summer?
Great thread. Subbing for this summer when I "garage" my saison.
Lots of good responses. My personal opinion on saisons are light in color, reasonably dry. Belgian yeast. Like WLP565 or Belle Saison
Farmhouse is the same except a blended yeast like WLP670 or TYB Farmhouse Sour. I usually fruit a farmhouse ale.
My house saison:
10# Belgian Pale
1/2# Munich 10L
3/4# Carapils
3/4# 20L Crystal
mash low 148-152
1oz Hallertauer 45min
1oz Strisselspalt 15min
Added with Strisselspalt:
1oz bitter orange peel
2tbsp crushed coriander
1tsp ginger root
2tsp green cardamom
WLP565 fermented in the high 60's for 5 weeks.
Delicious beer and probably not a saison by definitions in this thread. I should look up the true definitions just for my own knowledge.
Did you ever "garage" a saison over the summer?
I ultimately decided against it. Mainly based on m00ps suggestion to keep temps consistent. I guess he experienced bubble gum off flavors in saisons with wide temp swings. I'm glad I did too since our July and August was relatively mild. Temps would have easily swung 20 degrees day vs. night and I don't think my garage hit more than 90 for more than two days in a row.
My 3711 had no trouble attenuating with a 80+ initial fermentation and then finishing up at room temp.
The 3724 was another story. I eventually cranked that one up to 90-95 and it was still slow to attenuate. It got down to 1.008 (if I remember correctly) and I said "tastes good, keg it!" so I did. Didn't take long to kick, but I liked the 3711 better.
Next year I'll try the Belle Sasion strain but probably still won't "garage it".
Holy crap you like coriander! But by definition you are definitely brewing saison. Keep it dry and brew with what you have.
I've never gotten bubble gum from 3711, I have with 3724 and that's why I don't like to use it. I think temp swings with 3711 can bring about some fabulous esters. And really like when I do get the big swings while using 3711. If I can get in the 90's during the day, and have it drop to low 80's at night, all the better.
Try it man, I wouldn't steer you wrong.
Coriander brings a nice citrus nose/flavor. I've used it in numerous Belgian styles and the occasional IPA.![]()