German Gold Wheat Ale

Recipe

Malt

50% Briess Brewer’s

50% Briess Red Wheat

Hop Schedule

15 IBU Hallertau Mittelfruh @ 60min

Yeast

Fermentis WB-06

Process

Mash In @ 50C

Beta Rest @ 60C, 30min

Alpha Rest @ 70C, 30min

Mash Out @ 78C, 15min

Boil, 60min

Kettle No-Chill

Closed Ferment @ 25C, 7 Days

OG: 9.2P — IBU: 15 — ABV: 3.6%

Aroma

Specific Aromas

Clove, Ripe Banana, Banana Bread

Flavor

Specific Flavors

Clove, White Bread

Impression

Light, Crisp, Effervescent, Refreshing

The Ale

It is HOT & humid where I live. I wanted something light & refreshing. Having recently brewed a few hop forward ales for the blog, I really needed something crispy & malty. What better mid-summer ale than a German-Styled Wheat Ale? This isn’t my 1st, & certainly won’t be my last, but the focus of this ale was 2-fold. 1st, to try the kettle no-chill. More on that later. 2nd, to let it ferment at mid-summer apartment temps without air conditioning to see how Fermentis’ WB-06 performs.

To start off, lets talk about the kettle no-chill. I’m sure some of you are wincing, but hear me out. What sparked my interest in no-chill was my reluctance to waste water. Running cold water through a clean copper chiller right into a drain never sat well with me. Yes, you can collect that water to clean with, or do a load of laundry, but I live in an apartment. My wife would have some… ‘feelings’ about me lugging 5-gallon buckets of H2O up & down the hallway. I also loath cleaning that copper coiled chiller in my small apartment sink. I considered the Australian technique of transferring the hot wort to a plastic container, purging the air to limit oxygen, & sanitizing the vessel with the temperature of the wort. I find suitable containers aren’t that easy to locate in the states, And, I really don’t want another container. I’m also not super comfortable with my hot wort coming into prolonged contact with plastic, even HDPE. This is where the kettle no-chill comes in. When the wort is done boiling, I soak a hand-towel in sanitizer, drape that towel over the kettle, snuggly fit the lid, & let the wort air-cool for 12-24 hrs. The next day, I transfer the chilled wort to my fermenter, pitch the yeast, & clean the kettle. So… how did that work for me?

Really well! The ale, bottle conditioned for 4 weeks, is a hazy straw-yellow & pours with a tall, peaky white head. It has everything you’d expect from a good German Wheat Ale, including banana, clove, & wheat. What is really interesting is how clean it is. A combination of kettle no-chill & high fermentation temps had me worried, but there are no off flavors or aromas. None.

You may be asking yourself, is kettle no-chill a viable option? I really think so, but I’m going to put it through a few more trials to be sure (may not work out so well with hop forward ales). You may also be asking yourself, is it possible to push the limits of fermentation temperature with little to no ill-effects? Also yes, at least for WB-06.

Positives

The ale was exactly what I was looking for. Light, crisp, bubbly, low in alcohol, & balanced. With a couple weeks bottle-lagering in the fridge, it pours crystal clear. It has the banana, clove, & breadiness that I come to expect from a German Wheat Ale, & I love it. I would definitely brew it again.

Next Time

I might bump the gravity & alcohol a bit. I think, for some, it might come across a little too thin or lacking in flavor. Otherwise, the ale is solid. It really is, even with all the brewing antics.

Overall Preference

A poll on people's preference for the ale, updated regularly, based on a scale of 1-5 & organized by # of people for each rating.
I would buy this. I would buy more than one of this.
— C.F.