verysupple
Supremely mediocre brewer
- Joined
- 23/9/12
- Messages
- 1,057
- Reaction score
- 268
After many (eight - too many?) attempts at brewing a great Bavarian style weissbier I'm still researching the subject and brewing with wheat in general. One thing that keeps popping up in threads here and on other sites is that wheat (raw more so than malted) gives a tart quality to beer (sometimes known as "da tang"). Now my palate isn't perfect, but I've never had a commercial version of any wheat based ale (witbier, weissbier etc) that was tart. They're crisp and dry, but not tart. I've also never had a tart character from any of my home brewed wheat beers.
I'd like to know where this myth started, but really just want to get the message out there that wheat doesn't add tartness to beer. What are people doing to get this tart character? Letting it go sour? Anyway, if your wheat beers are tart/sour/have "da tang" they're probably infected or you did some crazy stuff with your water chemistry (i.e. too much lactic acid or acid malt).
I'd like to know where this myth started, but really just want to get the message out there that wheat doesn't add tartness to beer. What are people doing to get this tart character? Letting it go sour? Anyway, if your wheat beers are tart/sour/have "da tang" they're probably infected or you did some crazy stuff with your water chemistry (i.e. too much lactic acid or acid malt).