Sour Belgian Pale Ale
Recipe Specifics
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Batch Size (Gal): 5.50
Wort Size (Gal): 4.00
Total Grain (Lbs): 11.00
Anticipated OG: 1.046
Anticipated SRM: 4.3
Anticipated IBU: 18.0
Brewhouse Efficiency: 62 %
Wort Boil Time: 115 Minutes
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Batch Size (Gal): 5.50
Wort Size (Gal): 4.00
Total Grain (Lbs): 11.00
Anticipated OG: 1.046
Anticipated SRM: 4.3
Anticipated IBU: 18.0
Brewhouse Efficiency: 62 %
Wort Boil Time: 115 Minutes
Grain
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7.50 lbs. Franco-Belge Pilsener Malt
3.00 lbs. Wheat Malt
0.50 lbs. Carahell Malt
7.50 lbs. Franco-Belge Pilsener Malt
3.00 lbs. Wheat Malt
0.50 lbs. Carahell Malt
Hops
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0.75 oz Whole Czech Saaz 6.4% AA @ 100 min.
0.50 oz. Whole Crystal 4.6% AA @ 100 min.
0.25 oz. Whole Mt. Hood 2.7% AA @ 100 min.
0.25 oz. Whole Cascade 4.3% AA @ 100 min.
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0.75 oz Whole Czech Saaz 6.4% AA @ 100 min.
0.50 oz. Whole Crystal 4.6% AA @ 100 min.
0.25 oz. Whole Mt. Hood 2.7% AA @ 100 min.
0.25 oz. Whole Cascade 4.3% AA @ 100 min.
Extras
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Toasted oak chair legs, half used half fresh.
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Toasted oak chair legs, half used half fresh.
Yeast
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WYeast 3522 Belgian Ardennes
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WYeast 3522 Belgian Ardennes
Water Profile
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365 Spring Water with 1 tsp CaCl added to the mash
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365 Spring Water with 1 tsp CaCl added to the mash
Mash Schedule
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Mash Name: Step infusion
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Mash Name: Step infusion
25 min @ 125
60 min @ 146
15 min @ 158
60 min @ 146
15 min @ 158
Notes
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Brewed 8/11/07 by myself
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Brewed 8/11/07 by myself
Loosely based on Beatification from Russian River, a Belgian Pale/Single (Redemption) aged and inoculated with wood previously used in a Flanders Red (La Folie).
Hops were about a year old so I adjusted their IBUs down accordingly.
Used spring water and added 1 tsp of calcium carbonate to the mash. Adjusted 4 gallons of sparge water to a (cool) pH of 5.5 with 1.5 tsp of phosphoric acid. This was my first time adding acid and measuring pH, the hot break certainly seemed more intense than normal.
Collected 6.5 gallons of 1.048 runnings. Boiled down to 4 gallons of 1.065 wort. I forgot how much faster wort evaporation is when you are boiling outside on a propane burner.
Cooled the wort then pitched a smackpack of yeast (no time for a starter). Fermented in the mid-60's with a brief period colder when I forgot to turn off the fridge (I was trying to manually control the fridge), fermentation seemed to carry on sluggishly after that.
8/18/07 Transferred to secondary with a 4 inch piece of oak chair leg saved from my Flanders Red that had been soaking in some Flanders Red and the dregs from a bottle of RR Depuration for a week. I then topped up with bottled water in a 5 gallon Better Bottle, and affixed a fresh chair-leg/stopper/airlock assembly. Planning on letting this one age for 1-2 years depending on how it tastes.
12/23/08 Nice krausen formed, decent Brett flavor, not much sourness.
Planning on priming/bottling half in August, and aging the other 2.5 gallons on some Pluots. I have no experience with Pluots, so to get some more info I sent an email to Vinnie at Russian River and got this response:
"We add about anywhere from ½ a pound to one pound per gallon of beer, we are always experimenting. We’ve used a Pluot that is 50/50 mix of apricot and plum and one that was 60% apricot and 40% plum. The more the apricot the more tart the beer will be. The beer sits in the barrel on the fruit for 9-12 months."
8/11/08 Bottled half of the batch with 3/4 cup of cane sugar (aiming for high carbonation) along with 1/4 pack of cote de blanc wine yeast to speed carbonation. Racked the other half onto 2 lbs of quartered and pitted pluots, pictures/details. The fruited half will be bottled summer 2009.
8/26/08 Good carbonation already, even a bit of foam over. Flavor needs a bit of time to smooth out, but it shows promise.
11/03/08 First Tasting
6/28/09 Bottled the pluot half with 1/3 cup of cane sugar and a touch of Roeselare blend to aid in carbonation. The fruit had mostly broken down and lost its color.