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I make beer and do a few other things.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Belgian Cuvee Recipe

I used my new brewing pot yesterday for the first time and learned a few things. First, you lose a lot more water through evaporation with a large pot. Next time, I will add at least a half gallon more water to accommodate the loss. I also learned much less monitoring is required with the large pot because it keeps a nice rolling boil without much fear of an overboil.

Here's the grain bill:

6 pounds of Breiss dry golden malt extract
1 pound of caramel malt grain, cracked
2 ounces of Styrian Golding hops
1/2 ounce of dried orange peel. I used orange peels from Clementine oranges and froze them.

5-gallons
Original Gravity = 1.65
ABV goal = 6%
Bitterness - very low

Heat the water to 150 degrees and steep the caramel malt in a grain sack, nylon bag or cheesecloth for 20 minutes. It should color the water a nice amber and give the water a caramel smell. Raise the water to a boil and remove from heat and stir in the malt. Try pour it in as slow as you can to avoid clumping the malt together. Some malt may cling to the bag because of the heat coming off of the boil. You can dip the bag in the water to get the remaining malt off.

Add the first ounce of the hops and stir. For about 55 minutes monitor the boil, stirring occasionally. The boil should have constant bubbles rising to the surface that push a light foam layer around the top, but not an aggressive boil that could cause the liquid to come over the top of the pot.

At 55 minutes add another ounce of hops. At 59 minutes, add the orange peel for one minute, stir and turn off the boil at 60 minutes. I used a wort chiller to lower the temperature to 75 degrees and then transferred the wort to the fermenter, leaving behind much of the hops and orange peel. You could keep the peels in the beer to strengthen the flavor or add more during secondary fermentation.

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