I calculated it with Promash to be around 11 or so. I also have some 3.5 AA Hallertau that I thought I might use, but they are pellets, not whole hops.
Keep it in the mid 60's if you can, unless you're really fond of banana juice, and of course use a secondary...a hefe in particular can develop a lot of off flavors that will mellow out or dissappear while it's aging in the secondary.Biermann said:Any suggestions on fermentation of this or bottling would be appreciated. (Like, do I rack to secondary or not??). This is my first all grain hefeweizen.
Biermann said:Any suggestions on fermentation of this or bottling would be appreciated. (Like, do I rack to secondary or not??). This is my first all grain hefeweizen.
Mmmmm....cheerleader beer. We will enjoy her.Baron von BeeGee said:It's a beer designed to be enjoyed young and fresh (sounds so dirty)
El Pistolero said:Mmmmm....cheerleader beer. We will enjoy her.![]()
alemonkey said:I brewed a wheat beer with about 45% unmalted wheat, .
Fantastic. I enjoyed several of mine last night on the deck (unseasonably hot and dry here) and have the ingredients to work up another batch.Biermann said:Ok, I'm a bit excited. . . I got rid of the blow off hose and bucket air lock and replaced it with a real air lock. . .and I smelled my hefeweissbier. . . and it smells like Franziskaner. . . I about peed my pants I was so excited. and BTW, its STILL fermenting actively, although the krauesen is falling a little.![]()
homebrewer_99 said:I used to drive to the Hofbrauhaus after work just for a beer and the atmosphere!![]()
You might be able to find some all-extract hefeweizen recipes by searching as there has been an inordinate amount of hefe discussion since New Year's, but you'll probably have to sift through a lot of info. Though I brew AG, hefeweizens seem particularly well suited to all-extract to me for exactly the reason the honorable Walker-san mentions...the extract is already the perfect ratio of wheat to barley, usually 50/50 or 60/40. So, one suggestion would be:Gregg Meyer said:I am a newbie, but have had two successful sessions with ale. All I know about is Extracts, Can I make a wheat beer from extracts?
You can't get any simpler than this:Gregg Meyer said:I am a newbie, but have had two successful sessions with ale. All I know about is Extracts, Can I make a wheat beer from extracts? and if so does anybody have a simple recipe for the beguinner, who does does not know how to do the full mash thing and sparging.
I've done this recipe with great results although I use whle hops and up it to 1.2 oz.El Pistolero said:You can't get any simpler than this:
Weihenstephaner Hefeweissbier (from Beer Captured)
6 lb. Muntons Wheat DME
1 oz. German Hallertau (60 min)
Wyeast 3068 Weihenstephan Weizen
I had a dunkelweizen develop a very strong banana taste and aroma in the bottle (there was very little when I bottled it). The banana faded over time so that it's not quite so pronounced now, but it took several months.JimmyBeam said:after bottling I realized the location I had the bottles stored at was ~74ish. Now it tastes like bananas. That will fade over time right?