Looking to brew one for my next batch, but never attempted anything like these

I've heard of Belgium candi sugar, does this make a vast difference over other types of sugar??
Oh, the hardships I endure for my hobbyGarth wrote:yeah tubby, how did the Chimay brew go? any sneaky slurps yet?
I think to get the very pale colour you need to go more with pils or lager malt. The recipe details I have aretubby_shaw wrote:Duvel, from Wheeler.
25 litres
6380g pale malt
870g cane sugar
35g Styrian Golding 90 minute boil
35g Saaz hops 45 minute boil
15g saaz last 15 minutes of boil
Mash 67 C 90 minutes
From the Chimay clone I made I think that the yeast "makes" these beers.
Which reminds me, must go check on Chim Chimnay
hmmm interesting step, never heard of doing this in the primary, I suppose this would produce more Esters/Fusel Alcohols, and again give a unique fruity/spicy quality to the beer??steve_flack wrote: Primary: starts at 16-18C rises to 26-29C. Lasts 120hrs
It's quite common for Belgian beer fermentations to be run warm. Dupont Saison is fermented at or above 30C. In fact the yeast doesn't attenuate properly if it's not kept warm.moorsd wrote:hmmm interesting step, never heard of doing this in the primary, I suppose this would produce more Esters/Fusel Alcohols, and again give a unique fruity/spicy quality to the beer??steve_flack wrote: Primary: starts at 16-18C rises to 26-29C. Lasts 120hrs
Not something I would have normally thought of intentionally doing....in fact I'd try to avoid it!!
That's more to do with UK duty. It gets higher the stronger a beer is. My understanding is that in Belgium there's only one level of duty above 6% ABV and that's cat S. You might as well brew at 9% if you'd pay the same tax as on 6%moorsd wrote: Still it does explain why Duval is quite expensive to buy in the shops, certainly more processes involved than normal commercial breweries!