Witbier
Low-alcohol, fizzy, yummy witbier we drink straight from the primary.
Brewer: | Bob Davis | Email: | bob@reconstructinghistory.com | |||||
Beer: | Witbier | Style: | Belgian White (Wit) | |||||
Type: | Extract w/grain | Size: | 5 gallons | |||||
Color: |
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Bitterness: | 18 IBU | |||||
OG: | 1.027 | FG: | 1.010 | |||||
Alcohol: | 2.3% v/v (1.8% w/w) | |||||||
Grain: | 2 lb. Flaked oats | |||||||
Steep: | Flaked oats - good old fashioned Quaker type - are boiled along with everything else. | |||||||
Boil: | 30 minutes | SG 1.039 | 3.5 gallons | |||||
3 lb. Wheat extract | ||||||||
Spices are essential in Witbier, and this one is no different. Curacao orange peel: A fistful. Coriander seed: A fistful. Star anise: One whole. Cardamom: six or seven. Crack everything but the star anise in a coffee grinder and add at 25-minute mark. | ||||||||
Hops: | 1 oz. Styrian Goldings (5.5% AA, 30 min.) | |||||||
Yeast: | Any ale yeast I've got on hand is what I use, primarily English strains from Wyeast. I dislike managing different strains of yeast. | |||||||
Log: | This stuff is brewed such that it can be consumed within days of hitting the brewkettle. Ferment at ~65°. | |||||||
Carbonation: | Usually, any carbonation is because it's still on the tail-end of primary fermentation. | |||||||
Tasting: | My wife and I are deeply involved in living history (or reenactment). I brew this for 15th-century reenactment events, where we drink it for breakfast, lunch and dinner. I brew this on a Sunday, stick it in a Corny keg on Thursday night, and we're drinking it Friday night. According to my research, that's appropriate for the style. Plus, people like it. So I suppose it works! |
Recipe posted 11/12/07.