Thursday, February 3, 2011

American Wheat Beer Update and Saison Yeast Apfel Wine

It's been a while since I have updated because my computer decided to shuffle off its mortal coil in the form of a defective GPU. I am in the process of getting my computer replaced and in the mean time I am borrowing a laptop from the girlfriend. I am trying not to take it away from her too often as she has uses for it that are actually important. But really, what's more important than beer and food?

As you know, I brewed an American wheat beer just about two weeks ago. It has been slowly fermenting in my pantry closet, which stays in the low 50s this time of year, and it was ready to bottle on the 1st of the month. This was a fairly simple process that I will go over in more detail at a later date. Hopefully with some decent quality pictures. The beer was a very light golden color with a nice flavor of wheat and malt in the small sample that I tasted. I am not commenting on the flavor too much because carbonation can really highlight certain notes and can change how you experience the brew. I am going with natural re-fermentation in the bottle for carbonation as I always do when I bottle and I have to wait at least another week before I get to try this one in it's final form.

The second part of this post is in regards to an apfel wine I brewed before I even started this blog. A little background on this one. I have been in love with saison style beers for a long time. Sometimes known as "farmhouse ales" these are beers that are common to the areas in Belgium and France that border each other. I got interested in these when I started exploring my culinary heritage. France makes some wonderful beers but it is not one of the more well known or well respected beer producing countries. Saisons are distinctly French and Belgian so it made sense to try my hand at brewing one. It was great. I loved the character that the saison strain of yeast gave the brew so I cultured it and have been using it since. Most recently I used it in a mead and an apfel wine.

I am sipping on the last bottle of the apfel wine right now and I am really enjoying it. Very light golden color. Similar to a very light apple juice. The nose is fruity and smells distinctly of apple and spice. There is a little bit of a yeasty smell but it's light and subtle. The carbonation adds an effervescence and gives this drink a very light body. While it may be very bubbly there is no head to speak of. A layer of white foam formed when first poured but it vanished before the last drops had even left the bottle. This is all pretty standard for a cider or and apfel wine. It's just fermented fruit juice.

The flavor is dry and mildly tannic but it does not dry the mouth out. Sour but balanced with a distinct spice note that is likely from the yeast. Saison yeasts are known and prized for lending this kind of spice flavor to the brews fermented with them. It's part of why I am such a fan.

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