Added to the list, only have 2.5kg of wheat and got a Weizen planned for that as need a quick brew.
I'm sure it'll be fine, the yeast character is a little less obvious in this compared to a weizen, I think because the malt flavours are more prominent.I'm getting my Weizenbock on this weekend. Unfortunately I haven't been able to get the liquid yeast I wanted (WY3068) so am going with what I've got in stock (Mangrove Jacks M20). Hopefully it won't be too much of a compromise......
youre very welcome. im not sure but its a typical flavor i get when drinking wheat beers, especially ones with more than 20% malted wheat. it really is a complex beer and actually difficult to describe. i honestly was expecting a completely different taste from the aroma, it smelled exactly like a dubbel to me, but was quite pleasantly surprised with its uniqueness.Thanks @Pennine for the kind review :hat: This has been an interesting one, it has changed remarkably since I started drinking it about a month ago, initially having a huge raisiny fruitiness much like a quad, but it's faded somewhat to leave a more balanced and complex beer I think. And you're right about the slight sourness, I'm not sure where that comes from
Excited to try this onei was generously given a bottle of this in an exchange. it was well received and very different than what i have been drinking lately. although i have had a ton of experience with bock biers, i have only had a couple weizenbocks in my time.
poured super thick deep murky brown. i know with weiss biers you pour in the yeast but i prefer to leave as much in the bottle as i can.
aroma is straight up brown sugar with slight raisin, banana and nutty. i might even say banana bread. it smells very similar to that westy 8 i drank yesterday.
taste is not what i was expecting at all from the aroma. right up front i get a dark candi syrup, but then the refreshing slightly sour wheat kicks in, a bit of orange and banana but ever so light. as it warms the maltiness deepens and becomes more bread dough, a slight alcoholness lingers. no hop presence at all, like it should be, bitterness is perfect.
this one brings me back to those cool autumn nights in the netherlands drinking herfstbock with a little twist. a very enjoyable beer that goes down easy, a little too easy as i can feel the affects a little more than halfway through. you should be proud of this one, its right up there with the best bocks i've had.
in fact i think i may steal this one and try it out with rye...
I think I went for a chloride forward profile, probably about 120 ppm, and kept the sulphate low. Calcium was somewhere around 90 ppm and alkalinity about 40-50 ppm.by the way what kind of water did you use for this? i think im gonna do a mix up of this one with ingredients on hand this weekend.
Pretty much exactly what I went for tooI think I went for a chloride forward profile, probably about 120 ppm, and kept the sulphate low. Calcium was somewhere around 90 ppm and alkalinity about 40-50 ppm.
I do biab I was thinking it would be easier for me.i have not done a roggenbier, i have a hard enough time brewing a 20% rye recipe would be worried about 40 to 50% levels in a recipe. grab some rice hulls!
I've still not tasted a commercial weizenbock, always on the lookout though.Popped up on my news feed today.
https://homebrewanswers.com/schneider-weisse-aventinus-clone-recipe/
which reminds me, I have two bottles of the real thing in my stash.
Enter your email address to join: