As the Jar of Destiny challenge continues, Mike presents his take on an American Wild Ale. This beer came from the 18th pick in the series.
This style (28C Wild Specialty Beer) was one of the harder ones for the challenge as it does not fit neatly into three months. An American Wild Ale usually takes time, patience, and mixed fermentation. This beer was still a work in progress. Let’s see what Mike has to say.
The Recipe & Brewing Process
Batch Size:
About 4 to 5 gallons
Grain Bill:
50% Pale Malt
33% White Wheat
17% Light Munich
1% Caramunich II
Hops:
10 grams Fuggles for the full boil.
IBUs:
5 IBUs
Mash Schedule:
Mash at 155°F for 60 minutes
Water:
Spring water and tap water
Sulfate added to control chloride
Lactic acid added for mash pH
Original Gravity:
1.055
Fermentation:
Windsor Ale Yeast was pitched first.
It fermented for about five or six days.
Wyeast Roselare Blend was pitched after primary fermentation slowed.
Mike brewed a pale base beer with wheat and Munich malt. The goal was to give the microbes something to work on.
The beer was lightly hopped with Fuggles. The low hopping rate helped support the mixed fermentation.
Fruit Addition:
2 pounds tart cherries
1 pound raspberries
Fruit was thawed, blended, and added to the beer.
Gravity Before Fruit:
1.020
What We Learned
The fruit addition was very recent when we tasted the beer. It had been on fruit for less than one day, but the plan is to let the beer sit on fruit for three or four months. Mike may bottle it in Belgian-style bottles with corks. The goal is a highly carbonated, reddish-purple beer later in the year. At this point, the beer already had clear sour ale character in the aroma. The mixed fermentation was also noticeable in the flavor.
There was some funky, leathery Brett character and the beer also had a lactic sourness on the back of the palate. The sourness was present, but it was not too aggressive. There was also a light acetic note. The Roselare blend worked faster than expected. Within one month, the beer had noticeable sour character. The fruit should add more sugar and start more fermentation. The beer should continue changing over the next few months.
This challenge showed that American Wild Ale needs more time than most Jar picks. Still, the early sample was promising. The beer was complex, sour, and funky already. We will see where it goes after fruit aging.
BREW ON!