Thinking of trying to get a low alcohol (LA) beer on tap by partigyling my next brew. Inspired by a claw hammer video
Did dry Jan this year and developed a bit of a taste for LA beers which previously i’ve never enjoyed. They’re never quite right though and for some reason I resent the cost, which I appreciate is a reflection the processes aren’t dissimilar to making regular beer.
The basic gist of the video is just to do a normal mash and sparge to full volume on the first beer and then sparge further to collect whatever you get. One concern is people say that sparging below 1.010 can lead to extracting tannins and to be LA you probably want to be between 1.005-1.010. Im not that stressed about going over 0.5% abv since it’s for me but in order to compare to commercial examples it would be good to get to that ball park.
I’m using a brewdevil (70l) and my original grist is (from memory) 70/30 pilsner and wheat malt, the base for a sour (Philly sour) I plan to split and add different fruits too. I’ll be ending up with 42l in the fermenter so probably more leftover grist than I need.
My ferm fridge will be occupied by the main brew so my second fermenter is a 30l snubnose and that’ll have no temp control. Before the ferm fridge I used a lot of kviek and pitched warm, wrapped it up and let it do its thing inside. Not sure kviek is optimal for LA though since it’s supposedly needs more nutrients for lower strength regular beers.
The yeast is a big question mark for me, no idea if having so little work to do gives me more leeway in terms of temp and off flavours? Any recommendations of experience of that would be very welcome. Obviously using pressure is an option although that wasn’t part of my previous process using that fermenter (just spunding at the end).
Also I suspect I’ll be pulling too much out to make 20 litres of something sub 1.010, expect I’ll need to do some on the fly adjustments and dilutions.
The last big question mark is hopping rates and additions. I suspect I want to keep bittering pretty low since but haven’t really formulated a plan so any ideas welcome.
That’s about the extent of my thought process, prolly missing plenty. It will be a longer brew day of course so whether it’s worth it is up for debate but I guess time will tell.
Did dry Jan this year and developed a bit of a taste for LA beers which previously i’ve never enjoyed. They’re never quite right though and for some reason I resent the cost, which I appreciate is a reflection the processes aren’t dissimilar to making regular beer.
The basic gist of the video is just to do a normal mash and sparge to full volume on the first beer and then sparge further to collect whatever you get. One concern is people say that sparging below 1.010 can lead to extracting tannins and to be LA you probably want to be between 1.005-1.010. Im not that stressed about going over 0.5% abv since it’s for me but in order to compare to commercial examples it would be good to get to that ball park.
I’m using a brewdevil (70l) and my original grist is (from memory) 70/30 pilsner and wheat malt, the base for a sour (Philly sour) I plan to split and add different fruits too. I’ll be ending up with 42l in the fermenter so probably more leftover grist than I need.
My ferm fridge will be occupied by the main brew so my second fermenter is a 30l snubnose and that’ll have no temp control. Before the ferm fridge I used a lot of kviek and pitched warm, wrapped it up and let it do its thing inside. Not sure kviek is optimal for LA though since it’s supposedly needs more nutrients for lower strength regular beers.
The yeast is a big question mark for me, no idea if having so little work to do gives me more leeway in terms of temp and off flavours? Any recommendations of experience of that would be very welcome. Obviously using pressure is an option although that wasn’t part of my previous process using that fermenter (just spunding at the end).
Also I suspect I’ll be pulling too much out to make 20 litres of something sub 1.010, expect I’ll need to do some on the fly adjustments and dilutions.
The last big question mark is hopping rates and additions. I suspect I want to keep bittering pretty low since but haven’t really formulated a plan so any ideas welcome.
That’s about the extent of my thought process, prolly missing plenty. It will be a longer brew day of course so whether it’s worth it is up for debate but I guess time will tell.