National Homebrew Club Ireland

Brewing Discussions => Extract Brewing => Topic started by: DoubleG on September 10, 2016, 01:19:53 PM

Title: Champagne Beer
Post by: DoubleG on September 10, 2016, 01:19:53 PM
Hi all,  Looking to brew some champagne beer for a wedding coming up next year. I saw some stuff the maltose falcons did on making champagne beer using traditional champagne bottling. Just wondering if anyone has tried it themselves? Also can the base recipe be any type of beer and then just carb it to about 3.5-4 in the bottle??
Title: Re: Champagne Beer
Post by: Bubbles on September 10, 2016, 01:26:49 PM
I've never done the proper champenoise method before, it's not for the faint hearted.

Pick a beer style that is typically highly carbonated, such as a saison or a Belgian golden strong.
Title: Re: Champagne Beer
Post by: DoubleG on September 10, 2016, 01:39:01 PM
Thanks yeah I was looking at having a Belgian beer as the base. The method does look tricky but I reckon plenty of practice and planning and safety googles will help!!!
Title: Re: Champagne Beer
Post by: Simon_ on September 10, 2016, 06:18:13 PM
What is it?
Title: Re: Champagne Beer
Post by: Will_D on September 10, 2016, 06:21:40 PM
Whats the end product?

A highly carbonated CLEAR beer I assume!

Method Champenoise is all about removing the yeast by disgorging the yeast from the neck of the bottlle.

The real pros do it the hard way (involves time, turning the inverted bottles and a salted ice bath [-10C or less]), amateurs buy special plastic champagne cork that has a valve in them. (Yes I have them somewhere)

But why bother? Why not just carb up a keg and have draft Belgian Champers?

OK I know the sight of champagne bottles being uncorked is way more romantic than a keg.

Just trying to add o the discussion like

Cheers

Will
Title: Re: Champagne Beer
Post by: DoubleG on September 10, 2016, 07:31:57 PM
Are those valve corks easy to buy? How do they work. I understand its just a highly carbed Belgian beer but I'd want to have the Champagne bottled finished item.
Title: Re: Champagne Beer
Post by: Bubbles on September 11, 2016, 07:33:37 PM
How about a 750ml swingtop bottle with a classy, professionally designed label instead? A lot less hassle than all that riddling and disgorging.