QPB Hefeweizen
Posted: Sat Jun 25, 2016 3:05 pm
QPB stands for Quick Pipeline Boosting, which I need right now.
Pretty simple recipe, roughly 6 gallons post boil. I haven't decided how much I'm going to use tap water vs RO water...I've made great hefes in Pittsburgh and in New York, and NYC water is damn near RO. Pittsburgh is decidedly harder and more mineralized (like the water here, but with no chloramines). So I'll probably do something like 4 gallons of camden treated tap water in the mash--maybe slightly acidified with 88% lactic acid (still haven't gotten that pH meter yet), and 4 gallons RO as the sparge water.
6 lbs Wheat malt (might be red, might be white--not 100% sure which it is)
4 lbs Munich 10 malt (I've used MO in the past, too--and it's fantastic!)
60' mash @ 154* (since I have the grainfather, I'll probably experiment with some step-mashed hefes in the future. But this one will just be a single infusion with a mashout)
10-20' mashout @ 170*
60' boil
1~ish oz Strisselspalt hops @ 60', enough to get me about 10 IBUs.
Ferment with WLP380--the vial I bought on Monday expires in a month, so I actually made a small (roughly 750ml) starter today. No stir plate, so I'm just swirling it by hand every now and again...I've made this recipe (or a variation on it) many, many times and it does great with just 1 vial of yeast, so I am doing the small starter more to ensure viability than increase the cell count too much. I prefer WLP380 to WLP300, it's balanced a little more towards clove than banana, and I think it gives a little more character to the beer as compared to WLP300 (though that'll still make a damn fine hefe).
I'll probably ferment it in the low-mid 60s, anywhere from 62-68* should be fine and make a damn good hefe.
I plan to brew it tomorrow, and I am going to use twice as much ice in the prechiller as I've been using...I hope to get it down below 70* this way, but we'll see how it does. I might even try recirculating the wort back into the grainfather for a little while before I start using the prechiller--but I haven't fully decided just yet.
This should make for a delicious, slightly dark (but far from a dunkleweizen) hefe that goes down eaaasy in the summer heat. And, it should go grain to glass in 10-12 days. Perfect to keep the pipeline flowing strong (though Thorn and I can kick a 5 gallon keg of this in a weekend, no problem).
No gelatin fining in this beer, c'mon...it's a hefe!
Pretty simple recipe, roughly 6 gallons post boil. I haven't decided how much I'm going to use tap water vs RO water...I've made great hefes in Pittsburgh and in New York, and NYC water is damn near RO. Pittsburgh is decidedly harder and more mineralized (like the water here, but with no chloramines). So I'll probably do something like 4 gallons of camden treated tap water in the mash--maybe slightly acidified with 88% lactic acid (still haven't gotten that pH meter yet), and 4 gallons RO as the sparge water.
6 lbs Wheat malt (might be red, might be white--not 100% sure which it is)
4 lbs Munich 10 malt (I've used MO in the past, too--and it's fantastic!)
60' mash @ 154* (since I have the grainfather, I'll probably experiment with some step-mashed hefes in the future. But this one will just be a single infusion with a mashout)
10-20' mashout @ 170*
60' boil
1~ish oz Strisselspalt hops @ 60', enough to get me about 10 IBUs.
Ferment with WLP380--the vial I bought on Monday expires in a month, so I actually made a small (roughly 750ml) starter today. No stir plate, so I'm just swirling it by hand every now and again...I've made this recipe (or a variation on it) many, many times and it does great with just 1 vial of yeast, so I am doing the small starter more to ensure viability than increase the cell count too much. I prefer WLP380 to WLP300, it's balanced a little more towards clove than banana, and I think it gives a little more character to the beer as compared to WLP300 (though that'll still make a damn fine hefe).
I'll probably ferment it in the low-mid 60s, anywhere from 62-68* should be fine and make a damn good hefe.
I plan to brew it tomorrow, and I am going to use twice as much ice in the prechiller as I've been using...I hope to get it down below 70* this way, but we'll see how it does. I might even try recirculating the wort back into the grainfather for a little while before I start using the prechiller--but I haven't fully decided just yet.
This should make for a delicious, slightly dark (but far from a dunkleweizen) hefe that goes down eaaasy in the summer heat. And, it should go grain to glass in 10-12 days. Perfect to keep the pipeline flowing strong (though Thorn and I can kick a 5 gallon keg of this in a weekend, no problem).
No gelatin fining in this beer, c'mon...it's a hefe!