Anybody have a recipe for a gluten-free extract beer? My sister has gluten issues, and I told her she can make it herself on her stove rather than pay a fortune for it at the liquor store.
I don't know a recipe off hand but I think there's a kit at NG.
There was one on the shelf a couple of weeks ago.
Yep, those beers are expensive.
Ill check my clone brews book and see if there is anything out there
Homebrewtalk.com has a gluten-free section that you will probably find useful:
http://www.homebrewtalk.com/f164/ (http://www.homebrewtalk.com/f164/)
You might want to have separate equipment. If she is really sensative to it there will always trace amounts left on yours. There's a brewing network podcast on gluten free beer.
Based on reading
Sorghum, both in raw form, Syrup Extract, and Syrup itself. The syrup extract is the closest thing to barley in terms of FAN, enzymes, and sugar content, but imparts a tangy, bitter, or citrusy aftertaste.
You could get away with brewing a Hoegaarden style beer us WB-06 and some Citrus Zest and corriander
Hate to chime in with something somewhat OT - but you can brew all kinds of wine/hard fruit-ade/mead in exactly the fashion it was intended and end up with something awesome. My experience of all things gluten-free has been that they're like the real thing, only with 99% more suck.
Could you brew a slightly hopped 6% mead Hop the water that you would add to the honey combine the 2 throw in some roasted buckwheat which is gluten free , maybe some cold steeped coffee beans and come up with some sort of Meade Porter ?
I've combined honey and coffee before... the result isn't exactly harmonious.
Did consider a dry-hopped mead though... I think it would be awesome.
I was looking into the same thing and am going to try a batch with buckwheat as the primary ingredient...followed by 49% suck....too funny Richard!
I speak from experience when I say that suck has a 100% efficiency. :P...
Quote from: "HappyHax0r"I speak from experience when I say that suck has a 100% efficiency. :P...
Interesting how you would know that...
Well, given that I just got ran over by a big ole pile of suck, to the tune of several hundred bucks... I'd have to say it's damn efficient ... :P. It finds me often, and then thoroughly screws me.
I made a sorghum based GF beer this past fall that turned out reasonably well. Lots of late hopping and about a month's conditioning covered up most of the sorghum twang.
60 minute boil
6 gallons pre-boil volume
5 gallons post boil
OG 1.048
FG 1.008
5.2% ABV
46 IBU
Colour: 11.5 SRM
Fermentables
1lb. Toasted Buckwheat (steeped, 30min 155ºF)
6lbs. Sorghum Extract Syrup (added to boil—60 minutes to try and get some caramelization for more colour)
1lb. Belgian Candi Syrup D45 (last 10 minutes of boil)
Hops
US Magnum (13.0 % AA, Pellet) 0.75 oz - 60 Min
US Vanguard (5.0 % AA, Pellet) 0.50 oz - 10 Min
US Vanguard (5.0 % AA, Pellet) 1.50 oz - 5 Min
US Cascade (5.3 % AA, Pellet) 2.00 oz - Flame out
US Cascade (5.3 % AA, Pellet) 2.00 oz - Dry-Hopped (10 days)
Sorachi Ace (10.7 %AA, Pellet) 1.00 oz - Dry-Hopped (10 days)
Yeast
SafAle US-05 - Fermented around 60ºF
This one has been a surprisingly big hit with some of my BMC-drinking buddies.
The D45 I've read is quite nice. I made some Candi Sugar that turned out better than I expected as well: http://nbcba.org/forum/index.php?topic=1084.0
Thanks guys!
If you're still looking to do a gluten free beer, I read about a beer that was done by the owners of highgravitybrew.com, and the owner happens to have a gluten allergy and has been experimenting for a while now.
I guess the main complaint with sorgum is that it has a metallic flavour, so they avoid it.
http://blog.highgravitybrew.com/2011/03/my-latest-gluten-free-beer/
It is a woman that made the recipe and I'm not sure how much we can trust a lady when it comes to beer recipes, but thought it could be of value. :lol:
Thanks Jake. I'll take a look.