ajdelange wrote:I'm with boob (or bub) - if it ain't Weihenstephan 68 it ain't wheat beer. Well, that's a bit of a stretch. There are other similar strains but I always use 68 as the standard to which I compare.
This beer isn't a traditional Weizen. It's brewed to weizenbock strength heavily hopped, but fermented with Schneider's yeast. The result is not particularly clovey, and has a complex fruity, estery character, (vanilla, apple, banana, etc.,). They made an american version with = amounts amarillo/palisad, a german version with saphir. The hop amounts are the same for both recipes
The published clone recipe in Beer advocate was
5.5 gallons
OG:1.084
FG 1.012
8# Pilsner, 8# Wheat
0.75oz Magnum
0.25 amarillo / 0.25 palisade 15 min
0.25 amarillo / 0.25 palisade 5 min
0.25 amarillo / 0.25 palisade dry hop
So, I'm not looking for the best yeast for a hefeweizen, I'm looking for the yeast that will give me the complex esters and will not give me an excessively strong clove character.
EDIT: check out
http://beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/45/38700
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