Usually 3 months before i start to drink it. It does smooth out, but its still on the bitter side.how long do you age it, is it less bitter when you drink it?
The sample after carbing in the keg for 2 weeks is pretty good. Crisp, but not too dry.I have a Belgian Pale Ale that's in the fermenter right now based on the brewing classic styles recipe.
Never messed with amalyze enzyme. What kind of attenuation did you get and what was your mash temp?I do like a good Witbier. Last one I brewed was this:
5.5 gallons
5 lbs Belgian pilsner
5 lbs. flaked wheat
1 lb. flaked oats
1/4 lb acid malt
1 tsp amylase enzyme in the mash (Belgian pilsner I used had a low diastatic power--lots of adjuncts). You could sub German pilsner for more DP.
Perle hops to about 20-25 IBU
2 oz. fresh orange peel last 10 minutes of boil
3/4 oz. crushed Indian coriander seed last 10 minutes of boil
Mangrove Jack's M21
Edit: adding pic
View attachment 744556
Never messed with amalyze enzyme. What kind of attenuation did you get and what was your mash temp?
I just dug up my notes for that brew. I did a single infusion mash, BIAB, at 152F. I was spot-on for mash temp. OG was 1.056, FG was 1.007. AA was 87.5%, way beyond the 70-75% range stated by Mangrove Jacks for M21. Beersmith predicted OG to be 1.052, but beat that by 4 points. FG ended up 4 points UNDER Beersmith's prediction.
My notes state that there was a whiff of sulfur at bottling, but that it was gone by the time they conditioned. It turned out quite nice, albeit a little higher ABV than I had anticipated.
You could sub a higher DP Pilsner for the Belgian and you'd have enough overall DP to not need the amylase.
The Westmalle yeast is a top cropping yeast and needs extra headspace in the fermenter. (You could use Fermcap, although I never have any on hand). To prevent any problems with fermentation, I make a starter and pitch the whole thing at high krausen and don't hold the temperature down. (I brew a lot at ambient temperature, but I'm not suggesting that's the preferred method, just something that works for me).I am convinced that Westmalle top crops their yeast. This is the second time WLP530 has made a mess of my fermentation area despite, or maybe because of, open fermentation. I use to only use WLP500 which seemed like a much tamer yeast, but I wanted the challenge of fermenting with the notoriously difficult Westy strain. I also use to add the Cane Sugar when fermentation slowed instead of in the boil. The idea was that the yeast would get used eating longer chain sugars before introducing the mass of simple sugars to eat. I might go back to doing that to just to prevent these yeast explosions.
Tripel is the harder of the two, only because you can't hide the flaws behind a dark sugar. But, if you have hazies under control, which it looks like you do, you shouldn't have a problem with a tripelLooking to do my first Belgian recipe in the next 1 or 2 brew days. Still deciding on Dubbel vs Tripel.