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Author Topic: Honey Hefey  (Read 1677 times)

Offline btrammel

  • 1st Kit
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  • Posts: 21
Honey Hefey
« on: March 26, 2013, 11:29:40 pm »
I'm still new to this and only have one batch under my belt (2 more on their way!) I'm brewing my first 2 from kits, my third will be my first recipe. It's between a banana wheat or this, a honey hef. I've built it in BeerSmith2. Please let me know what you think - I'm in need of help!

HONEY HEF

INGREDIENTS
3 lbs - Extra Light DME
3 lbs - Wheat LME
4 oz - Honey malt (steeped)
1.5 oz - Saaz hops (60 min)
.5 oz - Saaz hops (5 min)
4 oz - Honey (flame out)
WLP380 (hefeweizen ale liquid yeast from White Labs)

Possibly racking on top of orange zest in secondary, even though I'm told this would make the beer a Witbier and not a Hef.

TARGET STATS
OG - 1.050
FG - 1.011
IBU - 19.5
SRM - 6.2
ABV - 5.1%

Have at it - please!

cornershot

  • Guest
Re: Honey Hefey
« Reply #1 on: March 27, 2013, 06:31:26 am »
Wheat lme is probably 50% wheat so I would just use 6# wheat lme in a hefe. I'm not sure you will get much honey character from only 4 oz each of honey and honey malt. Otherwise looks good.

Offline cheshirecat

  • Assistant Brewer
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  • Posts: 237
Re: Honey Hefey
« Reply #2 on: March 27, 2013, 09:48:41 am »
When I used to brew extract I used 100% wheat extract. As zimaclone pointed out most wheat extracts are 50% or 60% wheat. If you want 50% blend (which is what I do all grain, 50% wheat, 50% pilsner) then go with all wheat extract.

I have never used honey malt in a hef before but when I put 4oz in my Saison it was fairly apparent. I think 4 oz is a good starting point, go up or down next time you brew it depending on what kind flavor you want. The honey will pretty much ferment out and help to dry out the beer some, don't think you will get much if any honey character with it. It will help the beer from getting to sweet.

Don't know if you need the second hop addition. I usually just use bittering since hefs don't really have any hop flavor. Just a personal thing.

Last, adding orange to the beer will not make it a wit beer. Hef vs wit may have similar grain bills but are generally yeast depended for flavor (for the most part). If you are using a hef yeast you are making a hef. Hef yeast and wit yeast have very different flavors, it has nothing to do with orange.

Good luck!

Offline btrammel

  • 1st Kit
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  • Posts: 21
Re: Honey Hefey
« Reply #3 on: March 27, 2013, 11:39:02 am »
Thanks for the feedback guys - with that info, I'm going to adjust my recipe a bit.  I'll let you know how this turns out!