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The Colonial Saison Recipe

Here we’ve used Amarillo, Chinook, and Nugget to create an American saison with a bright pineapple and blackberry flavor and a distinct resiny Nugget aroma.

Josh Weikert Jun 28, 2017 - 4 min read

The Colonial Saison Recipe Primary Image

As we’ve demonstrated with The Classic Saison and The Continental Saison, with one base recipe, you can create many distinct saisons just by manipulating the hopping. Here we’ve used Amarillo, Chinook, and Nugget to create an American saison with a bright pineapple and blackberry flavor and a distinct resiny Nugget aroma.

ALL GRAIN

OG: 1.056
FG: 1.008
IBUs: 28
ABV: 6.1%

MALT/GRAIN BILL

8 lb (3.63 kg) Pilsner malt
1 lb (0.45 kg) Vienna malt
0.5 lb (226 g) wheat malt
2 oz (56 g) Caramunich malt

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HOPS SCHEDULE

Mash with 1 oz (28 g) of Amarillo [9% AA]
0.5 oz (14 g) Amarillo [9% AA] at 10 minutes
1 oz (28 g) Chinook [13% AA] in the whirlpool
1 oz (28 g) Nugget at post primary fermentation dry hop

YEAST

Wyeast 3724 Belgian Saison

DIRECTIONS

Mill the grains and mix with 3.5 gallons (13.25 l) of 162°F (72°C) strike water to reach a mash temperature of 150°F (65°C). Add the 1 ounce (28 g) of Amarillo hops. Hold this temperature for 60 minutes.

Vorlauf until your runnings are clear. Sparge the grains with 3.1 gallons (11.7 l) and top up as necessary to obtain 6 gallons (23 l) of wort. Boil for 75 minutes, following the hops schedule.

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After the boil, turn off the heat, add the Chinook hops, and whirlpool for 10 minutes. Then chill the wort to slightly below fermentation temperature, about 68°F (20°C). Aerate the wort with pure oxygen or filtered air and pitch the yeast.

Ferment at 69°F (20°C) for 6 days, then increase the temperature to 72°F (21°C). Add the Nugget dry hops and hold at temperature for 4 more days. Once the beer reaches terminal gravity, bottle or keg the beer and carbonate to about 2.5 volumes of CO2. You may want to cold crash the beer to 35°F (2°C) for 48 hours before packaging to improve clarity.

EXTRACT

Replace the Pilsner malt with 6 pounds (2.72 kg) of Pilsner liquid malt extract. Bring 5.6 gallons (21.2 l) of water to about 162°F (72°C) and hold there. Steep the crushed Vienna, wheat, and Caramunich malts in grain bags in the hot water for 15 minutes. Remove the grain bags and let them drain fully. Stir in the liquid malt extract and stir until completely dissolved. Top up as necessary to obtain 6 gallons (23 l) of wort. Boil for 75 minutes, following the hops schedule.

BREWER’S NOTES

This grist will give you a beer that is slightly on the paler end of the spectrum and uses relatively small amounts of character malts (Vienna, wheat, Caramunich) just to provide some nice grain/malt background. I like Vienna rather than Munich to avoid any “heavy” maltiness and give an increased perception of attenuation. Be sure to give this one time to ferment out fully—saison should be a dry beer!

Ready to make the move from extract to all-grain or upgrade your all-grain system? Want to avoid the cost of doing it wrong? CBB’s_ Hot Rod Your Kettles and Mash Tun_ class is the perfect introduction to building out your bad-ass homebrew system.

This recipe is built to yield a batch size of 5 gallons (19 liters) and assumes 72 percent brewhouse efficiency.

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