Holgate Hop Tart

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indica86

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Ordinarily, we use just four ingredients – water, malt, hops and yeast – to create delicious beers. This time around we decided to add another layer of complexity by using some Lactobacillus, bacteria from the same friendly family that turn milk into yoghurt and have been used as components in complex Belgian sour beers for centuries. These helpful critters produce lactic acid, which, in judicious amounts, can create beers with a refreshing sourness.
There is more than one way to get this sourness into beer and we chose to naturally sour our wort in the kettle via an extended rest with a population of the bacteria before the boil, then finishing the fermentation with house yeast in the normal way.
Traditional European sour beers are usually low in bitterness with little or no hop character. We decided to take a New World approach and marry citrusy Australian hops to the lemony lactic tang.
Tasting Notes:
A light and hazy gold, Hop Tart has a zesty aroma of citrus and bright tropical fruits. The flavour awakens the palate with a surprising light tartness that blends beautifully with the lemony hop character. The finish is clean, slightly sour, dry and refreshing… a true new world beer, not bound by style but led by the brewers fancy for a quenching summer ale.
4.5% ABV 25IBU
I had a pint of this on tap recently and it was wonderful. Really bright and refreshing.
Any pointers on how to go about this?
 
Sounds like they dump some Yakult in for a while before the boil - full of "Lactobacillus casei Shirota strain"

They might actually use the lac. bulgaricus [spelling might be wrong] which is commonly used to make yoghurt.
my local health food store sells it as live yoghurt starter

No idea how long you'd need to rest it before the boil or how much to use, but why not give it a go.

Start small and short and see what happens :)
 
Sounds like a 'sour mash' Berliner Weisse of sorts. Perform a normal mash and then pitch either a commercial lacto culture (Lacto Brevis works better IMO) or a handful of grain, cover with glad wrap to stop oxygen getting in and allow to sour for a few hours to days (depending on how sour you want it). Then boil as per normal with new world hop additions and pitch yeast.
 
Black n Tan said:
cover with glad wrap to stop oxygen getting in and allow to sour for a few hours to days (depending on how sour you want it).
Oxygen bad when souring? Is it worth pumping co2 in there before sealing then? Might have to try this as an experimental brew.


Edit: This link has some more info - looks like they did use grain to introduce the lacto:

they used Lactobacillus, bacteria from the same friendly family that turns milk into yoghurt, to naturally sour the wort before the boil by adding a little malt along with its indigenous population of microorganisms. They then decided to take a New World approach and marry citrusy hops to the lemony lactic tang.
 
goatus said:
Oxygen bad when souring? Is it worth pumping co2 in there before sealing then? Might have to try this as an experimental brew.


Edit: This link has some more info - looks like they did use grain to introduce the lacto:
Although lacto is meant to be aerotolerant my experience has been it has been beneficial for souring to keep oxygen out. Additionally if using grain to introduce lacto, oxygen can encourage the growth of acetobacter and give a vinegar flavour which is not desirable in the BW. You can purge with CO2 (I do when souring in a fermenter), but glad wrap may be more effective when souring in the mash tun.
 
Yep but it will more one dimensional and not have the complexity.
 
Black n Tan said:
Sounds like a 'sour mash' Berliner Weisse of sorts. Perform a normal mash and then pitch either a commercial lacto culture (Lacto Brevis works better IMO) or a handful of grain, cover with glad wrap to stop oxygen getting in and allow to sour for a few hours to days (depending on how sour you want it). Then boil as per normal with new world hop additions and pitch yeast.
Hmm, Allow to cool then add the grains I assume? I have some yoghurt cultures in my freezer would they work?

How long I guess is the other question...
 
Yes pitch the grain or culture typically in low to mid 30s C. How long is the question, depends on how sour you want it and how much lacto you add. A bit tart a few hours to a few days for good sourness. I haven't tried the Hop Tart but suspect it is mildly tart without being overly sour. Taste along the way and boil once it gets to you liking sour wise. I am sure you can use your yogurt culture, although you may get better results with a commercial culture of lacto or even the native bugs on barley grain (although with grain there is always a risk of something undesirable flavour wise grabbing hold). That said I recently used Keffir grains to make a BW and it has lovely complexity.
 
Hop Tart did not taste sour at all but was nicely tart.
 
How about a tablespoon of my sourdough culture - over 5 years old and very stable - thrown in. Repeatable and dependable.
 
If you are just going for some tartness then I think most sources of lacto will work. However if you are going for sour (pH 3.0-3.3) as in a in a true BW, then a barley derived lacto is probably a better way to go. My kefir BW got to pH 3.5, not quite as low as I would have liked, but it taste pretty good.
 
Do I need some sort of pH meter then?

I'll go for tart rather than sour...
 
No you don't require a pH meter to brew a BW: I was just trying to point out that a yoghurt culture might not give you the sourness of a traditional BW, but it probably will give you the tartness you are chasing. Be guided by your taste buds, in the end that is the most important measure of a beer.
 
This could make for a nice lazy brew day.

Mash the night before, transfer to kettle, add some grain for lacto, boil in the morning.

Do i trust my crummy chinese temp controller to hold temp though? heh.
 
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