CASTLE MALTING: BELGIAN AMBER BEER

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seymour
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CASTLE MALTING: BELGIAN AMBER BEER

Post by seymour » Tue Aug 13, 2013 9:45 pm

As you know, I'm always hunting for good beer recipes. You may have noticed lately I'm getting some proven ones directly from maltsters. This makes perfect sense when you think about it, because the companies producing the malt ought to know how it performs best, which malts go best together, etc. It's also in their best interest to recommend the best possible recipes because if the brewer produces great beer, they'll keep coming back for more of that particular malt.

Today I'll share some from Castle Malting in Belgium. Their slogans are straight-forward and honest, "Belgian Malts That Make Your Beer So Special" and "Malts From The Country Famous For Its Beer."

Castle Malting: Belgian Amber Beer

DESCRIPTION:
Due to the combination of Château Munich Light® and Château Abbey® malts, this special beer is characterized by a rich warmness typical of wine and a unique freshness typical of beer.

Original gravity: 14 – 16°Plato, 1057-1065
Alcohol: 6 - 7%
Colour: 10 - 15 EBC
Bitterness: 18 - 22 IBU

INGREDIENTS:

Malts:
60% Pilsen
30% Light Munich
10% Abbey or CaraRuby

Hops:
Saaz and Hallertauer (combined)

Yeast:
Safbrew S-33

Step 1: Mashing
-Mash in at 65°C and rest for 60 minutes
-Rest at 72°C for 15 minutes
- Rest at 78°C for 2 minutes

Step 2: Boiling
Duration: 1 hour 30 minutes; the volume of wort declines by 8 - 10%

-After 15 minutes add half of the hops, after 85 minutes add the rest of the hops and sugar, if necessary

*Spices option: Coriander (1 g/hl) and grains of paradise (1.5 g/hl) or liquorice (0.5 g/hl)

**Sugar option: White candy sugar (0.5 kg/hl)

Step 3: Fermentation
Start at 20°C, raise the temperature to 22°C, allow the diacetyl to rest for 24 hours at the end of fermentation prior to yeast removal.

Step 4: Lagering
minimum 2 weeks at 4°C

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