Rodan
Well-Known Member
hey guys,
So ive been tasting and criticizing past AG homebrews that ive made... mainly in a hefe-weissen and a belgian triple that i brewed. Both beers were made from recipes found in homebrew books and were not changed or modified. Recently, i brewed a biere du garde (from "farmhouse ales" using a Wyeast seasonal biere du garde... WAY to young yet) and, most recently i brewed an oatmeal stout (not yet bottled)
Both beers (the hefe and the triple) are displaying this wild/ yeasty flavours, although the hefe is definatly displaying more. I drink a lot of import beer, and i LOVE belgian ale (St. Bernardus, Karmeliet, Unibroue, Gouden, Saison) and german hefe weissen (like hacker-pschorr or paulaner), so i definatly know what they are suppost to taste like. I use liquid Wyeast brand, whole hops and generally try to keep things "authentic" (as much as i can).
Im wondering if anyone has suggestions for a more authentic taste. I own a couple books about belgian ale ("brew like a monk", "farmhouse ales" and a couple classic beer style books like "german hefe weissen" and Belgian ales").
I havent used isinglass or any other filtration method... is there a possibility that there is simply to much yeast suspended in the ale? How about the brand of grain? Conditioning process??
The triple is developing great flavour, but is haunted by the yeasty/wild flavor that appears in the middle of the palette... subtle but still noticable.
I guess im trying to fine tune my beers... im really interested in brewing so i definatly dont mind spending extra money or time to get better results.
Any suggestions??? Anyone else really interested in belgian beers??
Thanks guys!
:rockin:
So ive been tasting and criticizing past AG homebrews that ive made... mainly in a hefe-weissen and a belgian triple that i brewed. Both beers were made from recipes found in homebrew books and were not changed or modified. Recently, i brewed a biere du garde (from "farmhouse ales" using a Wyeast seasonal biere du garde... WAY to young yet) and, most recently i brewed an oatmeal stout (not yet bottled)
Both beers (the hefe and the triple) are displaying this wild/ yeasty flavours, although the hefe is definatly displaying more. I drink a lot of import beer, and i LOVE belgian ale (St. Bernardus, Karmeliet, Unibroue, Gouden, Saison) and german hefe weissen (like hacker-pschorr or paulaner), so i definatly know what they are suppost to taste like. I use liquid Wyeast brand, whole hops and generally try to keep things "authentic" (as much as i can).
Im wondering if anyone has suggestions for a more authentic taste. I own a couple books about belgian ale ("brew like a monk", "farmhouse ales" and a couple classic beer style books like "german hefe weissen" and Belgian ales").
I havent used isinglass or any other filtration method... is there a possibility that there is simply to much yeast suspended in the ale? How about the brand of grain? Conditioning process??
The triple is developing great flavour, but is haunted by the yeasty/wild flavor that appears in the middle of the palette... subtle but still noticable.
I guess im trying to fine tune my beers... im really interested in brewing so i definatly dont mind spending extra money or time to get better results.
Any suggestions??? Anyone else really interested in belgian beers??
Thanks guys!
