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Taking mash temps after an hour |
As mentioned in a previous post, I dubbed this brew a "smashing" saison because it was brewed as a single malt and single hop beer otherwise known as a SMaSH beer. I used Belgian Pilsner malt and Sorachi Ace hops. Some may be familiar with the Brooklyn Brewing beer "Sorachi Ace" which I was somewhat trying to replicate.
My beer turned out fairly strong and dry at 8.3% abv. Brooklyn's beer weighs in at 7.5ish. I used Wyeast French Saison yeast and it really went to town during fermentation.
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Wyeast's French Saison yeast is a beast! |
One trick about this style is that the original brewers traditionally brewed the ale in the lofts of their barns which were obviously not air conditioned. Therefore to replicate the higher ambient temperatures, I allowed the fermentation to gradually warm up (a general "no-no" in traditional home brewing). While most American yeasts will produce off flavors at higher temps, the Saison yeast I'm using will develop many of the unique characteristics that help to distinguish this as a unique brew at around 80 deg. After active fermentation slowed down the temperature dropped to 69 and stayed there for about a week. The result is that this beer attenuated (efficiency during fermentation) down as low as it could go resulting in a higher alcohol and drier brew....EXACTLY as I had hoped and as the style requests.
I will update in the next few weeks with tasting notes...in the meantime here is the recipe:
SMaSHing Saison:
Original Gravity = 1.062
Finished Gravity = 1.000 (!!!)
Calculated ABV = 8.3%
Grains and Mash Schedule:
Belgian Pilsner Malt 14 lbs
-Mash at 156 F for 60 min; Sparge at 168 F.
Hop Schedule:
-90 Min boil
60 min = Sorachi Ace, .5 oz.
30 min = Sorachi Ace, .5 oz.
10 min = Sorachi Ace, .5 oz.
-Chill to 68 deg; pitch: Wyeast French Saison 3711
-Raise fermentation temperature from 68 to 70; after 3 days raise temp to no higher than 80 deg.; after 7 days lower temperature to 68 or lower.
-Fermentation ran 17 days from 7/12 - 7/29; racked to keg 7/29.
**Tasting Update
This beer took forever to carbonate in the keg. I assume combined with a fairly warm kegerator as well as such a large alcohol content, the beer just wouldn't turn CO2 into tiny bubbles. BUT with some tweaking this beer has turned out well. Honestly, I would do this beer again but not as a smash beer. The Belgain pils malt combined with Sorachi Ace hops REALLY gives this beer a strong bite on the front end. Maybe if not just a little too much. Mid sip, the beer starts to mellow and frankly is fantastic. The mouthfeel is great an it finishes well. I would suggest revamping the recipe to include a little wheat or other grain to balance the front. But at least it looks pretty, right???