Cloud Surfer
Well-Known Member
Belgium dark strong ales are my all time favourite beers. This is going to be my first go at making a quad, though I will brew a ton of these, so it's really just the start of the journey. These are the beers I want to get good at, and will be the main reason I move over to AG eventually. For now I think I have an extract recipe that will make a nice beer in the Rochefort 10 style. But for anyone playing along at home who have made these before please feel free to offer any advice.
Recipe looks a bit like this-
4.5kg Briess Pilsen Light Extract
1.5kg Caramunich
500g Flaked Wheat
1.35kg D-180 Candi Syrup
200g Belgium Soft Blonde Sugar
45g Hallertau Mitt (60min)
45g Styrian Goldings (15min)
Wyeast 1762
As far as I can tell, that's pretty much how the Monks make it, and I'm only cheating by using Pilsner extract instead of doing it from grain. I'll steep the Caramunich and Flaked Wheat and get the boil going from there with the hop additions. Then add the Pilsen extract and sugars in the last 10 minutes. That should get me very close to the Rochefort numbers with an OG of 1.097 and ABV of 11%.
I'll make a big starter, and then pitch it at around 20C rising to about 24C by day 7. This seems one of the most critical parts of making a quad to get the proper ester profile. The fermentation schedule is one thing that will take me some brews to sort out. I'll keep it in primary for 3 to 4 weeks then do the pressure transfer thing into keg and bulk age at 12C for 3 to 6 months before transfer to bottle for bottle conditioning with a small, fresh yeast addition.
Anyway, that's the plan.
Recipe looks a bit like this-
4.5kg Briess Pilsen Light Extract
1.5kg Caramunich
500g Flaked Wheat
1.35kg D-180 Candi Syrup
200g Belgium Soft Blonde Sugar
45g Hallertau Mitt (60min)
45g Styrian Goldings (15min)
Wyeast 1762
As far as I can tell, that's pretty much how the Monks make it, and I'm only cheating by using Pilsner extract instead of doing it from grain. I'll steep the Caramunich and Flaked Wheat and get the boil going from there with the hop additions. Then add the Pilsen extract and sugars in the last 10 minutes. That should get me very close to the Rochefort numbers with an OG of 1.097 and ABV of 11%.
I'll make a big starter, and then pitch it at around 20C rising to about 24C by day 7. This seems one of the most critical parts of making a quad to get the proper ester profile. The fermentation schedule is one thing that will take me some brews to sort out. I'll keep it in primary for 3 to 4 weeks then do the pressure transfer thing into keg and bulk age at 12C for 3 to 6 months before transfer to bottle for bottle conditioning with a small, fresh yeast addition.
Anyway, that's the plan.