Brewferm Grand Cru

Discuss making up beer kits - the simplest way to brew.
wetdog

Brewferm Grand Cru

Post by wetdog » Thu Jul 24, 2008 3:14 pm

I've just bought 2 identical kits, Brewferm Grand Cru. As they are only 9 litres each I thought I would put them both together in the fermenter. I know I have to use double the sugar but should I put in both yeast sachets?

wetdog

Post by wetdog » Thu Jul 24, 2008 4:54 pm

thanks Daab :D

Chris The Fish

Post by Chris The Fish » Fri Jul 25, 2008 12:37 am

a truely fantastic brew.

i made mine with candy sugar from hop and grape, and it was one heck of a brew.

if you've ever had schneider's Aventinus then you know what your in for.

happy days! :beer: :beer:

wetdog

Post by wetdog » Fri Jul 25, 2008 4:40 am

thats good to know as I've not tried anything like this before.
I'm going to tip a kilo of spray malt into it and if it gets anywhere near the proposed 8% then I'm sure I'll be able to suffer it :D

not cheap though, no change from £25 for 18 litres...

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bosium
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Post by bosium » Thu Sep 04, 2008 9:28 am

Hi wetdog,

I guess this thread is a bit old so it's probably too late, but my advice would NOT be to add DME to this kit. Use sugar!! Brewferm are not being cheap by telling you to add sucrose to the brew instead of malt extract, sugar is a vital addition to just about all Belgian ales as it not only lightens the body of a high-gravity brew, but it dries it out and prevents it from becoming too malty and cloying.

The reason the sugar dries out a beer is because it ferments almost completely, where malt extract will not attenuate completely, thereby leaving a residual sweetness to the beer. If you do not want to use sucrose (table sugar / candi sugar), then use glucose / dextrose instead. The yeast has to break down the sucrose into fructose and glucose before it can ferment it, this reaction creates byproducts which could be desirable in a Belgian beer, so don’t be afraid to use sugar.

Cheers,
G

wetdog

Post by wetdog » Thu Sep 04, 2008 12:49 pm

Hi bosium,
yes it is too late but you are right about the sweetness. it finished fermenting at 28 which gave it an ABV of around 6%. I tried all sorts to get it going again including yeast vit and a champagne yeast starter but couldn't generate a single bubble. It's not unpleasent to drink but would definately use sugar next time

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bosium
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Post by bosium » Thu Sep 04, 2008 8:44 pm

hey sorry to hear that, hope it doesn't put you off belgian styles though..

wetdog

Post by wetdog » Fri Sep 05, 2008 9:51 am

naa, not a chance, Leffe is one of my favorite beers

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TC2642
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Post by TC2642 » Fri Sep 05, 2008 2:58 pm

I quite like the Brewferm yeast, made a very good clone of a Westmalle Tripel using it. The temp went all over the place but I still ended with a nice tasting beer.
Fermenting -!
Maturing - Lenin's Revenge RIS
Drinking - !
Next brew - PA
Brew after next brew - IPA

ADDLED

Post by ADDLED » Sat Sep 06, 2008 3:26 am

Chris The Fish wrote:a truely fantastic brew.

i made mine with candy sugar from hop and grape, and it was one heck of a brew.

if you've ever had schneider's Aventinus then you know what your in for.

happy days! :beer: :beer:
Hi Chris, Ive had the Aventinus :D and its a dark beer but I looked at the details of this kit and its a golden beer. Is that right?
Im keen on trying it and even more so if its anywhere like the Aventinus.
tks

Chris The Fish

Post by Chris The Fish » Sat Sep 06, 2008 7:44 am

i did the double grand cru brew and used candy sugar, thinking it would come out like a golden beer it actually ended up very dark, it would be interesting to know what colour others came out like.

The taste is essentially a high strength wheat beer and mine (being dark) was a very close match to aventinus both in taste and appearance, whether by chance or otherwise it was a fantastic brew and one im going to do again this year.

ADDLED

Post by ADDLED » Sat Sep 06, 2008 9:58 am

Right thats it, im sold on it!
You said a double brew; did you double up the water too? Also you didnt boil it at all right?

Chris The Fish

Post by Chris The Fish » Sat Sep 06, 2008 2:02 pm

yeah, double up the water, essentially treat them as 2 kits in one bucket as opposed to a double kit with single water (you could try it, only dont smoke near it when youve finished!)

no boil is necessary, i basically poured the contents of 2 tins into a bucket, then rinsed both cans with hot water from the kettle and emptied them into a large pot, into which the sugars go and stir until dissolved. This is then added to the bucket and again stirred until the syrup has been disolved, then i added cold water (from as high as poss for airation), a stir and a quick test should give you a nice little number.

i did use a different yeast, but i think the one which comes with the kit is fine, i also added about 300 or so grammes of glucose just to get it up there.

have fun!!!

PeteH

Post by PeteH » Mon Sep 08, 2008 11:27 am

Got one of these for my next brew. Does anyone know if using glucose instead of Candi sugar would be detrimental?

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bosium
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Post by bosium » Mon Sep 08, 2008 11:40 am

candi sugar is just table sugar, ie sucrose. I'd use it, as its cheaper than glucose and the act of breaking the disaccharide sucrose into its constituent parts of sucrose and fructose will mean the yeast creates some esters as byproducts which may be desirable for your belgian beer.

glucose will ferment cleaner, so feel free to use it if you like..

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