To the folks that asked for the recipe to the Brett-fermented pale ale I brought to the last meeting, here you go. It's largely Matt Franklin's recipe, with a few tweaks based on ingredients I had on hand. Also, if you want the 3% ABV version I brought to the meeting, I recommend doughing-in at 160F and holding the mash at that temp or higher until conversion is complete. The mash regimen I'm suggesting in the recipe below should give you a more fermentable wort but also give the beer a good amount of body.
http://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/r ... e-brettsky
Wayne Brettsky
Re: Wayne Brettsky
I followed Matt Franklin's recipe.
Strong sour nose. Taste is dank. Very dank.
I was hoping not to have to do the dry hop, but have to in order to balance a little bit.
I'll have to omit the hops that lends the dankness.
Strong sour nose. Taste is dank. Very dank.
I was hoping not to have to do the dry hop, but have to in order to balance a little bit.
I'll have to omit the hops that lends the dankness.
Swilling:
Fermenting:
Secondary: Munich Helles, Rye Wheat, Cherry Melomel
Lagering in fridge: Hanssen's Cherry Kriek
Dry hopping: none
On deck:
Fermenting:
Secondary: Munich Helles, Rye Wheat, Cherry Melomel
Lagering in fridge: Hanssen's Cherry Kriek
Dry hopping: none
On deck:
Re: Wayne Brettsky
Sour? What yeast did you use?
Re: Wayne Brettsky
White Labs 644 Brett Trois.
Will bring a bottle to the next meeting.
Will bring a bottle to the next meeting.
Swilling:
Fermenting:
Secondary: Munich Helles, Rye Wheat, Cherry Melomel
Lagering in fridge: Hanssen's Cherry Kriek
Dry hopping: none
On deck:
Fermenting:
Secondary: Munich Helles, Rye Wheat, Cherry Melomel
Lagering in fridge: Hanssen's Cherry Kriek
Dry hopping: none
On deck: