Difference between revisions of "Berliner Weissbier"
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==General Best Practices== | ==General Best Practices== | ||
* Limit CO2 and do not aerate before pitching | * Limit CO2 and do not aerate before pitching | ||
− | * Pitch Lactobacillus | + | * Pitch [[Lactobacillus]] between 90F and 120F depending on your Lactobacillus strain or blend for ~ 5-7 days |
* Create Lacto starter 1-2 weeks in advance of brew day. | * Create Lacto starter 1-2 weeks in advance of brew day. | ||
* Pitch [[Brettanomyces]] after cooling down after [[Lactobacillus]] fermentation phase | * Pitch [[Brettanomyces]] after cooling down after [[Lactobacillus]] fermentation phase | ||
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=Methods and Recipes= | =Methods and Recipes= |
Revision as of 14:40, 3 December 2014
Contents
Berliner Weissbier
Description
Berliner Weisse is a top-fermented, bottle conditioned wheat beer made with both traditional warm-fermenting yeasts and lactobacillus culture. They have a rapidly vanishing head and a clear, pale golden straw-coloured appearance. The taste is refreshing, tart, sour and acidic, with a lemony-citric fruit sharpness and almost no hop bitterness.
Served in wide bulbous stemmed glasses, tourists in Berlin will often order on as a "Berliner Weisse mit Schuss: Himbeere" or "Berliner Weisse mit Schuss: Waldmeister". These are syrups that are added to make the sourness more palatable. Himbeere is raspberry (red) and Waldmeister is woodruff (green).
Typical average alcohol by volume (abv) range: 2.0-5.0%
General Best Practices
- Limit CO2 and do not aerate before pitching
- Pitch Lactobacillus between 90F and 120F depending on your Lactobacillus strain or blend for ~ 5-7 days
- Create Lacto starter 1-2 weeks in advance of brew day.
- Pitch Brettanomyces after cooling down after Lactobacillus fermentation phase
Methods and Recipes
Devin Bell's
This section maintained by Devin Bell only please.
Basic Recipe
- ingredient one
- ingredient two
- ingredient three
Steps
- one
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- three
Sour Mash
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- three