Tony Dyer
Active Member
AT the end of September I decided to make my first attempt at a temparature stepped mash. I used a recipe for De Konick Belgian ale, which uses lager ingredients but a top-fermenting ale yeast. Here's the recipe (from Wheler and Protz). I got 9 litres out of this (I was hoping for 10 - 12 litres), partly due to syphoning and general incompetance problems:
2kg Lager Malt
650g Vienna Malt
30g Chocolate Malt
30g Saaz hops (start of boil)
Irish Moss
1/2 sachet Mangrove Jacks M41 Belgian Ale yeast
Mash at 50 degrees for 30 mins and 67 degrees for 60 mins.
The initial results in the fermenting vessel were horribly murky - like Horlicks - I couldn't get it any clearer. The fermentation went well at first. It's the first time I used my new bubbler jar with an airlock instead of the old plastic bucket. It was still bubbling away after 2 weeks with a heavy sticky looking head on it. After about 19 days I racked off into a spare bucket over 60g of priming sugar solution and then bottled. I had real problems syphoning (2 hands and 1 tube) without getting loads of trub into the bottling vessel. Anyway, despite these issues I got 18 1/2 litre bottles of the stuff, all looking very murky again and 1 or 2 looking more like rough cider than beer. (I have one of those little filtering bags somewhere that fit over the syphon tube - I remembered it about 2/3 of the way through bottling). A couple of weeks on the shelf cleared it quite satisfactorily I'm glad to say.
So yesterday evening, 5 weeks after brewing and 2 1/2 weeks since bottling I tried it. A couple of hours in the fridge and the bottle opened with a refreshing pop (swing top). Poured with a nice head and the taste... well, frankly fantastic! I have never tried De Konick but mine tastes like Leffe - and I'm VERY pleased about that! So pleased that I'm going to have to try it again before Christmas to see if it was a fluke.
The OG was approx 1045 and it fermented down to approx 1003 which in my calc's works out at about 5.2%. That figure seems bout right having had a couple.
Oh, and I have an auto-syphon and bottle filling wand on order!
2kg Lager Malt
650g Vienna Malt
30g Chocolate Malt
30g Saaz hops (start of boil)
Irish Moss
1/2 sachet Mangrove Jacks M41 Belgian Ale yeast
Mash at 50 degrees for 30 mins and 67 degrees for 60 mins.
The initial results in the fermenting vessel were horribly murky - like Horlicks - I couldn't get it any clearer. The fermentation went well at first. It's the first time I used my new bubbler jar with an airlock instead of the old plastic bucket. It was still bubbling away after 2 weeks with a heavy sticky looking head on it. After about 19 days I racked off into a spare bucket over 60g of priming sugar solution and then bottled. I had real problems syphoning (2 hands and 1 tube) without getting loads of trub into the bottling vessel. Anyway, despite these issues I got 18 1/2 litre bottles of the stuff, all looking very murky again and 1 or 2 looking more like rough cider than beer. (I have one of those little filtering bags somewhere that fit over the syphon tube - I remembered it about 2/3 of the way through bottling). A couple of weeks on the shelf cleared it quite satisfactorily I'm glad to say.
So yesterday evening, 5 weeks after brewing and 2 1/2 weeks since bottling I tried it. A couple of hours in the fridge and the bottle opened with a refreshing pop (swing top). Poured with a nice head and the taste... well, frankly fantastic! I have never tried De Konick but mine tastes like Leffe - and I'm VERY pleased about that! So pleased that I'm going to have to try it again before Christmas to see if it was a fluke.
The OG was approx 1045 and it fermented down to approx 1003 which in my calc's works out at about 5.2%. That figure seems bout right having had a couple.
Oh, and I have an auto-syphon and bottle filling wand on order!
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