Strawberry Beer

Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum

Help Support Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

timbman

New Member
Joined
11/1/10
Messages
4
Reaction score
0
Hi All,

I am looking at making a strawberry flavoured beer. And maybe adding a slight chocolate flavour to the beer aswell by adding cacao nibs in the secondary.

For a 20L batch, how much strawberries do you recommend? And how much cacao nibs? I have read that it is best to add both to the secondary.

Is there anything i need to do to the strawberries/cacao nibs before using them (i.e. boiling, or soaking in vodka?)

Thanks,
Tim
 
the search function is your firend. learn to use it and AHB will giv up her secrets to you

link 1

link 2
 
I did a strawberry lager earlier in the year.
Racked about 10L onto 1-1.5kg frozen stawberry seconds from our garden, for a week @ lager temps for secondary.

I would agree from previous threads that strawberry "detracted from the taste of the beer rather than complimenting it". I am glad I only did a half batch - I would prefer a well aged K&K over it any day, though the missus loves it.
The sweetness is mostly gone with an aroma & flavour of berry.
Is like drinking a beer with a berry in your mouth - not my cup of tea.

Also; for some reason some of the berry (which was blended frozen) floated & some sank. It mightnt be a bad idea to rack off again prior to bottling, because it is hard to keep it out of the bottle (though not a big drama - it settles eventually)

V
 
I did a strawberry wheat earlier this year (basically from citymorgues link) and I racked a bit over 10L onto 2kg of strawberries, which was nice, but it had a lot more aroma than it did flavour.

As for the cacoa nibs, I'm not 100% sure. I'm currently fermenting a chocolate porter that uses cocoa powder, and that was basically made into a syrup with dextrose and water, but I have no real idea on how cacoa would go. I assume the nibs are just smashed up cacao beans?? This is more personal preference, but if I was to ever (and I will!) use raw cacao in a beer, I'd be of the mind to keep it raw and maybe just drop them in the fermenter when you pitch the yeast. My advice would be to split a batch and play around with it. The recipe I used called for 100g of cocoa for a 21L batch, but then again, I'm not 100% sure how different the 2 are.
 
I did a strawberry wheat ale w/ US yeast a while ago. I overheated my strawberries trying to pasteurise them and it threw out heaps of pectic haze. Tasted nice though. I think I used 2 or so kilos for 21L
 
Hi All,

I am looking at making a strawberry flavoured beer. And maybe adding a slight chocolate flavour to the beer aswell by adding cacao nibs in the secondary.

For a 20L batch, how much strawberries do you recommend? And how much cacao nibs? I have read that it is best to add both to the secondary.

Is there anything i need to do to the strawberries/cacao nibs before using them (i.e. boiling, or soaking in vodka?)

Thanks,
Tim

" Adding Fruit to beer


Many brewers have experimented with adding fruit to their beers. The most commonly added fruit to beer is raspberries, but many others have been tried at some point or another. Depending on what fruit you use, and what base beer you use, you will need a decent amount of them- a 20L batch will generally need at least 1kg worth of fruit for a flavour change that is noticeable.

If you want to add them in Primary, it would be best to wash the fruit in cold water first to get rid of the majority of surface crap, then cool the wort to 70-80C and use a hop-bag to dunk the cherries in for 2mins. Once this is done, put them in a sealed container while the wort no-chilled overnight and then dump the cherry bag in the fermenter and rack the wort in on top. However, adding the fruit to primary is believed to 'scrub' a lot of fruit flavour, so it is not recommended.

Putting the fruit into secondary is largely considered to be the better way to have best extraction of the fruit flavours. Before putting them into the fermenter, wash them in cold water then pasteurise at 80C for 1min, or use a Sodium Met. solution to sanitise.

Below is a quick list of do's and dont's of using fruit in a batch of beer-

  • DON'T boil, you'll lose all your fruity goodness and risk leaching pectic acid into your wort, causing a haze in the final beer.
  • DON'T pulp. Don't bother - This will just make it harder to rack your beer off the fruit. See "Freezing" below.
  • DON'T use in primary, you'll ferment-out all your flavour and aroma.
  • DO sanitise in water at 80C for 1min or 70C for 2mins. Use a hop-sock or muslin wrap to allow the hot-water to touch all the fruit. Using a zip-lock bag is mostly pointless.
  • DO freeze your fruits for a few days or weeks before you use it. This will break-down the cell membranes and make the fruitiness easier to extract into your beer.
  • DO use in secondary.
  • DO use a sediment reducer in your fermenter, if only so your fruit bits don't clog your tap-hole.
If you're worried about pectic haze, you can use a pectic enzyme to break-down the acid. Should be available from your LHBS.

Don't bother with strawberries - you need a truck-load of them to make any impression on the beer. Or alternatively buy a large box of 'jamming' strawberries from a market.

"

Got this off the net and go by these methods often with no problems!
Unless your making a wheat beer i wouldn't worry about strawberries imo, I just made a red ale with 100g cocoa and 0.5kg of cherries
and it turned out awesome. Can post the recipie if you want..

So preferably i would add cherries or raspberries to your beer because you won't have to add anywhere near as much and do about the same thing.

Drew
 
Although I didn't follow the links chances are one of them is my Strawbeery. I made this every year for a while.

For a good aroma and a subtle hint of what exactly is that flavour in this wheat? type of flavour, 2.5kgs of super ripe in a standard batch.

For a good aroma and an actual strawberry flavour I used 3kgs, and then 4 in a half batch.
I was buying them by the box for $5 though and getting 3-4kgs depending on how fussy I was so I could afford to be generous.

Either way I think they actually make a very good fruit beer, but not a really good intense sort of fruit like you get from rasberries or other strong berries.

Forget getting any pink colour in your beer from strawberries in my experience.
 
" Adding Fruit to beer
[*]DON'T pulp. Don't bother - This will just make it harder to rack your beer off the fruit. See "Freezing" below.
Drew
sorry but i completely disagree with that one. i think most of the articles ive read say to pulp. i pulped and frozxe and got great result. not hard to rack.
just my opinion

edit: Ben - yup one of the link is to your strawbeery
 

Latest posts

Back
Top