Help With Wheat Beer

Try some of these great recipes out, or share your favourite brew with other forumees!
bloodoaf

Post by bloodoaf » Fri Jun 22, 2007 4:54 pm

I soaked my wheat for the Hoegaarden for about 10 mins in hot water, blitzed it in a food processor, then added itto the mash tun. This was way beyond crushed, but worked fine for me. :D

oblivious

Post by oblivious » Fri Jun 22, 2007 5:33 pm

bloodoaf wrote:I soaked my wheat for the Hoegaarden for about 10 mins in hot water, blitzed it in a food processor, then added itto the mash tun. This was way beyond crushed, but worked fine for me. :D
Was that whole grain or flaked wheat you used

The cereal mash is a near boil to gelatinise the (whole) wheat so it can be converted in the mash

steve_flack

Post by steve_flack » Fri Jun 22, 2007 6:24 pm

oblivious wrote: The cereal mash is a near boil to gelatinise the (whole) wheat so it can be converted in the mash
No need with wheat as it's gelatinisation temperature is 52-64C. Handy as that's pretty near mash temp. :wink:

oblivious

Post by oblivious » Fri Jun 22, 2007 6:42 pm

steve_flack wrote:
oblivious wrote: The cereal mash is a near boil to gelatinise the (whole) wheat so it can be converted in the mash
No need with wheat as it's gelatinisation temperature is 52-64C. Handy as that's pretty near mash temp. :wink:

Thats handy :D

mysterio

Post by mysterio » Sun Jun 24, 2007 8:20 pm

I've made a fair few wits now, I cook the milled raw wheat and oats before mashing. The Hoegaarden yeast that White Labs sell works well for it but t-58 works equally as well. The key is the spicing, a good ounce of coriander and some curacao orange peel at the end works nicely plus i usually use some chamomile and black pepper. I like Hallertau Mittlefruh for hopping because it has a spicy quality.

As mentioned, the key to a German weiss is less the grains you use and more the yeast (the Weihenstephan yeast is excellent) and how you manipulate the temperatures and the mash. A good german wheat can be made with 60/40 wheat to pilsner malt (even better would be to replace a proportion of the pils malt with munich malt). Essential is that WLP300 yeast.

Keep the hopping subtle I would say, any of the German noble hops work great, I wouldn't go sticking Amarillo in there or anything.

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