I've been wanting to brew a Blonde Biere De Garde ever since reading about them in the Farmhouse Ales book by Phil Markowski.
Biere De Garde is a classic farmhouse style ale similar in some ways to the French Saison Farmhouse Ale. Where Biere de Garde's differ from Saison is that Bieres de Garde were meant to be cellared for a period or "laid down" and were maltier and higher in gravity. Since these beers where typically lagered for months in corked champagne or belgian beer bottles they also picked up a distinct cellar aroma brought on by the cork. Saison's where typically smaller beers, 3%, and drank a bit more fresh to be consumed by the farm-hands in replace of water throughout the summer months. Here's a nice post on the differences between Biere de Garde and Saison. I've had a few fantastic examples of the style..Castelain Blonde Biere de Garde, and Jolly Pumpkin Biere de Mars. Castelain being brewed with an Ale or Lager yeast (not sure) and Jolly Pumpkin brewed with Souring yeasts and bacteria. I wanted to replicate both versions so I decide to do a 10 gallon split batch. I ended up doing 11 gallons (The Jeffrey Crane method of experimentation!) and pitched the 1 gallon with 100% Brett Drie as another little side experiment!
Often times I've read that Biere de Garde is fermented with lager yeast and that the yeast isn't an important part of the beers characteristic in modern examples of the style. I tend to lean towards how they probably were brewed way back in history and I can only imagine that they were brewed with similar yeast strains as Saisons. For my Ale version of Biere de Garde I went with a relatively unknown yeast called Belgian Shelde which presumably comes from Brouwerij De Koninck in Antwerp, Belgium. This yeast seemed to be a perfect fit. Slight sulfury (like a lager) yet retaining Belgian yeast characteristics (clove, fruity, but hopefully no banana as I hate banana in beer)
malt & fermentables
%
|
LB
|
OZ
|
Malt or Fermentable
|
ppg
|
°L
|
55%
|
15
|
0
|
Pilsner Malt
|
38
|
2
|
22%
|
6
|
0
|
Vienna Malt
|
36
|
3
|
7%
|
2
|
0
|
Candi Sugar, Clear
|
38
|
0
|
5%
|
1
|
8
|
Caravienne Malt
|
34
|
22
|
5%
|
1
|
8
|
American Crystal 20L
|
34
|
20
|
5%
|
1
|
8
|
Aromatic Malt
|
36
|
26
|
27
|
8
|
Original Gravity: 1.059
Final Gravity: 1.012
Color: 9° SRM (Gold to Copper)
Mash Efficiency 58%
use
|
time
|
oz
|
variety
|
form
|
aa
|
boil
|
60 mins
|
2.0
|
Hallertauer
|
pellet
|
4.8
|
boil
|
15 mins
|
2.0
|
Tettnang
|
pellet
|
4.5
|
The Heifer (Young)
5 G's on Wyeast Belgian Shelde Ale yeast (Brouwerij De Koninck yeast)
2nd Place - Belgian, French, German |
and fermenting at the same
5/28/12 - Bottled from Keg
10/13/12 - 2nd place in the Belgian, French, and German category of the Nordeast Big River Homebrew Competition!
The Bullocks (Old)
5 G's on ECY02 Flemish Blend
Siphoned from Sour Saison fermentor (second generation)
pitched at 65 degrees fermenting at 70 degrees.
The Runt (the little one)
1 G on 100% Brett Drie / Avery 15
Pitched at 80 degrees fermenting
vigorously within 18 hours at 65 degrees
5/28/12 - Bottled: I bottled and use carb tabs for carbonation. I got 5-12 oz, and 1 -750 ml bottles. Saved the yeast for pitching into a 5 gallon Saison type beer.
Sounds like a fantastic range of beers from 1 wort. I plan to brew a Biere de Garde sometime this year, so it will be interesting to hear about your results. Keep us posted.
ReplyDeleteI can't wait for this to be ready. The clean version on Belgian Shelde yeast is putting out so much sulfur right now it's crazy.
ReplyDelete