yankinoz
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- Joined
- 16/2/12
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If you've been to Vietnam, you've probably drunk it. It's literally cheaper than chips, is rather bland, but not awful, goes out in barrels not long after brewing (bia hoi means fresh beer), has an abv around 3.5%, and isn't all that bad. It is supposedly a lager. The grist comprises malt and quite a lot of adjuncts: rice, sugar, or both.
Albanese seems to like it and approves of the bags of JW pale malt sitting in one brewery.
What I can't find good information on is the length of brewing and, if any, conditioning. How fresh is fresh? The most-repeated claim is that it goes out in steel kegs that day after mashing and the start of fermentation. That seems highly improbable. I suspect, but do not know, the brewers typically ferment fairly warm for a few days and then ship it.
Does anyone have more detail on yeasts, brewing temps and conditioning? Alleged clone recipes vary.
Bia hoi is not something I would brew or order outside Vietnam, but better information might be useful for would-be impatient brewers of mid-strength lagers.
Albanese seems to like it and approves of the bags of JW pale malt sitting in one brewery.
What I can't find good information on is the length of brewing and, if any, conditioning. How fresh is fresh? The most-repeated claim is that it goes out in steel kegs that day after mashing and the start of fermentation. That seems highly improbable. I suspect, but do not know, the brewers typically ferment fairly warm for a few days and then ship it.
Does anyone have more detail on yeasts, brewing temps and conditioning? Alleged clone recipes vary.
Bia hoi is not something I would brew or order outside Vietnam, but better information might be useful for would-be impatient brewers of mid-strength lagers.