I am going to have a go at this one as its one of my favourites but not sure about the Pride of Ringwood hops seems they have got a bad rep. Any other thoughts on hops for a leffe would be appreciated.
OG=1.067, FG=1.016, SRM=7, IBU=26, abv=6.5
Mash:
11.75# Belgian Two-row Pilsner Malt
4 oz. (113 g) Belgian Biscuit Malt
4 oz. (113 g) Belgian Aromatic Malt
4 oz. (113 g) German Munich Malt
2 oz. (57 g) Honey Malt
Mash at 152F (65.6C).
Bring the water to a boil, remove from the heat and add:
8 oz. (226 g) Belgian Clear Candi Sugar
2 oz. (57 g) Malto Dextrin
3/4 oz. (21 g) Pride of Ringwood at 9.3AA (4.7 HBU) (bittering hop)
Boil for 45 minutes then add:
1/2 oz. (14 g) Styrian Goldings (flavor hop)
1 tsp. (5 ml) Irish Moss
Boil for 15 minutes.
Chill and pitch.
1st choice yeast: Wyeast 1762 Belgian Abbey II; Ferment at 68-72F
(20-22C)
2nd choice yeast: Wyeast 3522 Belgian Ardennes; Ferment at 68-72F
(20-22C)
I found a Leffe clone
I found a Leffe clone
Landy.
The OP's recipe looks like a Clone Brews recipe....usually they aren't viewed as that accurate. FWIW Brew Like a Monk gives the hops in Leffe as Hallertau and Saaz to 25 IBU.
I've made similar style beers before and stuck to a simple Pilsner malt, Aromatic malt and Sucrose recipe. I've used Whitelabs WLP-575 blend before with good results. IMO the yeast is probably the most important ingredient in this style. It needs to be Belgian and you'll need to do a starter.
I've made similar style beers before and stuck to a simple Pilsner malt, Aromatic malt and Sucrose recipe. I've used Whitelabs WLP-575 blend before with good results. IMO the yeast is probably the most important ingredient in this style. It needs to be Belgian and you'll need to do a starter.
Last edited by steve_flack on Wed Apr 16, 2008 9:22 pm, edited 2 times in total.
The thread i found the recipe in came from a book called Captured Beer. I have never made and tasted a home brewed Belgium beer, i made a 50/50 pale malt and wheat malt with cascade for 90 and sazz for 15 mins with T-58 on Sunday. I ended up with 22ltr @ OG 1060. Looking forward to tasting it.
Landy.
'Beer Captured' is from the same people as 'Clone Brews'.landy813 wrote:The thread i found the recipe in came from a book called Captured Beer.
For my Abbey Blonde I used 80% Pale (I thought I used pils but my records say otherwise), 4% aromatic and 16% table sugar (all %ages by weight). I hopped with Challenger for bittering and Saaz for aroma and flavour.
What yeast did you use in there Steve? I'm thinking it might be time to get another Belgian beer brewed.

Sounds goodI have never made and tasted a home brewed Belgium beer, i made a 50/50 pale malt and wheat malt with cascade for 90 and sazz for 15 mins with T-58 on Sunday. I ended up with 22ltr @ OG 1060.

In that brew I used the Whitelabs 575 Belgian Blend which which worked out well. My OG was 1.068 and it finished at 1.012 for 7.5% ABV, 82% attenuation. IIRC it was very Leffe like but a tad stronger.mysterio wrote:What yeast did you use in there Steve? I'm thinking it might be time to get another Belgian beer brewed.
Next weekend I'm planning on doing a Belgian Enkel and I'll use WLP500 for that. I'm using the Enkel as a starter for the Dubbel I'll do after it.
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I'm really happy you guys have started discussing this particular project as I would like to develop something similar as well. I would be very interested in learning what yeast to use and related fermentation temperatures etc. Once I get something more or less like Leffe, I would then of course be obligated to mess with things and try and put my own stamp on the beer. 

Drinking:Saison (in bottles), Belgian Dubbel (in bottles), Oud Bruin (in bottles), Olde Ale (in bottles),
Abbey Triple (in bottles), Munich Helles, Best Bitter (TT Landlord clone), English IPA
Conditioning: Traditional bock bier, CAP
Fermenting: Munich Dunkel
Next up: Bitter (London Pride like), ESB
So many beers to make, so little time (and cold storage space)
Abbey Triple (in bottles), Munich Helles, Best Bitter (TT Landlord clone), English IPA
Conditioning: Traditional bock bier, CAP
Fermenting: Munich Dunkel
Next up: Bitter (London Pride like), ESB
So many beers to make, so little time (and cold storage space)