A lot of friends of mine have disappeared off to Leipzig for a music festival this weekend that I'm unable to attend. The bastards. However, their departure has given me an idea to re-create a fairly obscure German beer from that same region which pre-dates the Reinheitsgebot, a beer called Gose, brewed with coriander and brackish water.
Traditionally, the beer was not capped when it was put into bottles, but was instead put into bottles with tall, narrow necks and the yeast cake would have formed a natural cork. I am not doing this part...
http://www.germanbeerinstitute.com/Gose.html
Anyway, here's the recipe that I'll be attempting:
23l batch, 90 minute mash, 90 minute boil
3300g Wheat malt
1650g Pilsner malt
140g Aromatic malt
440g Acid malt
28g Saaz hops, 60 minutes
33g Coriander seeds, 10 minutes
33g sea salt, 10 minutes
Safbrew WB06 yeast
Yes, that is salt that's in the recipe! I'll be making a start on this tonight after work in order to save tomorrow for pub lunches and Eurovision.
The plan is to let primary fermentation end and then transfer it to a large glass carboy for 3 weeks to let the lactic acid come through. It's going to be an interesting one to say the least; I just hope that it works!
Definitely one of the more unusual ingredients I've added to a beer...
Traditionally, the beer was not capped when it was put into bottles, but was instead put into bottles with tall, narrow necks and the yeast cake would have formed a natural cork. I am not doing this part...
http://www.germanbeerinstitute.com/Gose.html
Anyway, here's the recipe that I'll be attempting:
23l batch, 90 minute mash, 90 minute boil
3300g Wheat malt
1650g Pilsner malt
140g Aromatic malt
440g Acid malt
28g Saaz hops, 60 minutes
33g Coriander seeds, 10 minutes
33g sea salt, 10 minutes
Safbrew WB06 yeast
Yes, that is salt that's in the recipe! I'll be making a start on this tonight after work in order to save tomorrow for pub lunches and Eurovision.
The plan is to let primary fermentation end and then transfer it to a large glass carboy for 3 weeks to let the lactic acid come through. It's going to be an interesting one to say the least; I just hope that it works!
Definitely one of the more unusual ingredients I've added to a beer...