Haputanlas
Well-Known Member
- Recipe Type
- All Grain
- Yeast
- Wyeast 3711 French Saison Yeast
- Yeast Starter
- 1.5 qt
- Additional Yeast or Yeast Starter
- Brettanomyces, Lactobacillus, and Pediococcus
- Batch Size (Gallons)
- 5.5
- Original Gravity
- 1.057
- Final Gravity
- 0.999
- Boiling Time (Minutes)
- 60
- IBU
- 27
- Color
- 12
- Primary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp)
- 10 Days at 68 F
- Secondary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp)
- A long time with the bacteria added
- Tasting Notes
- Smokey, Sour, Dry, Gin, Oaky, and loads of other goodness!
Hey Guys,
This is one of my favorite (If not my favorite) beers at the moment. The great guys at Jester King released the recipe for their Gotlandsdricka with the extra steps to sour it and turn it into Viking Metal. Viking Metal is essentially a sour/wild version of Gotlandsdricka that is aged in Gin Barrels.
IMO, Gotlandsdricka is a great beer, however far too smokey with nothing to cut that intense flavor. This is where Viking Metal shines. Viking Metal's sour/gin characteristics turn Gotlandsdricka into a dry and sessionable wonder. I'm not suggesting sessionable in the ABV department, I'm referring to the fact that the beer can be consumed for an entire session without the smoke getting too much in the way. I can drink this beer all day and night!
It is also my opinion that this beer is unlike ANYTHING you've ever tried. I've yet to find anything commercially available that is anywhere near this style. I would venture to say that anyone with access to this beer NEEDS to try it at least once. Jester King definitely has found something that is truly unique and sets them apart.
Thanks to the guys at Jester King and Beer & Wine Journal for sharing this with all of us (http://beerandwinejournal.com/gotlandsdricka-clone/).
Note, this recipe is designed for achieving 85% efficiency. Make sure to adjust for your particular environment. Also note, this doesn't match up 100% against the specs on their website, but at least they are giving something away
Recipe Info
Description
This rendition of Gotlandsdricka—an ancient Swedish farmhouse ale that was once the beer of Vikings—was brewed with birchwood smoked malt (smoked in house), juniper and Myrica gale, then aged in Old Tom gin barrel for several months with wild yeast and souring bacteria. Unfiltered, unpasteurized, and naturally conditioned.
9.5 lb Pilsner Malt
3 lb. 14 oz. Weyermann Rauchmalz (beechwood smoked malt)
3 lb 9oz. birchwood smoked Weyermann Organic Pilsner malt
13 oz. flaked rye
9.4 oz. Weyermann Oak Smoked Wheat malt
Hops and Other Spices (for 27 IBU total)
East Kent Goldings hops (27 IBU)
1.25 oz. (at 5.4% alpha acids), boiled for 60 min
0.20 oz. juniper berries, at whirlpool
0.42 oz. sweet gale, at whirlpool
Wyeast 3711 French Saision yeast
(make a 1.5-qt. yeast starter)
PROCEDURE
Mash at 154 °F. Boil wort for 60 minutes. Aerate wort and pitch yeast. Ferment at 68 °F. Allow temperature to free rise after 48 hours.
Inoculate with Brettanomyces and lactic acid producing bacteria and age in a gin barrel. As an alternative to barrel aging, soak oak cubes for 4–7 days in gin. Add about 2.5 oz. (71 g) of oak cubes to the fermenter 3–4 days before bottling.
This is one of my favorite (If not my favorite) beers at the moment. The great guys at Jester King released the recipe for their Gotlandsdricka with the extra steps to sour it and turn it into Viking Metal. Viking Metal is essentially a sour/wild version of Gotlandsdricka that is aged in Gin Barrels.
IMO, Gotlandsdricka is a great beer, however far too smokey with nothing to cut that intense flavor. This is where Viking Metal shines. Viking Metal's sour/gin characteristics turn Gotlandsdricka into a dry and sessionable wonder. I'm not suggesting sessionable in the ABV department, I'm referring to the fact that the beer can be consumed for an entire session without the smoke getting too much in the way. I can drink this beer all day and night!
It is also my opinion that this beer is unlike ANYTHING you've ever tried. I've yet to find anything commercially available that is anywhere near this style. I would venture to say that anyone with access to this beer NEEDS to try it at least once. Jester King definitely has found something that is truly unique and sets them apart.
Thanks to the guys at Jester King and Beer & Wine Journal for sharing this with all of us (http://beerandwinejournal.com/gotlandsdricka-clone/).
Note, this recipe is designed for achieving 85% efficiency. Make sure to adjust for your particular environment. Also note, this doesn't match up 100% against the specs on their website, but at least they are giving something away
Recipe Info
Description
This rendition of Gotlandsdricka—an ancient Swedish farmhouse ale that was once the beer of Vikings—was brewed with birchwood smoked malt (smoked in house), juniper and Myrica gale, then aged in Old Tom gin barrel for several months with wild yeast and souring bacteria. Unfiltered, unpasteurized, and naturally conditioned.
9.5 lb Pilsner Malt
3 lb. 14 oz. Weyermann Rauchmalz (beechwood smoked malt)
3 lb 9oz. birchwood smoked Weyermann Organic Pilsner malt
13 oz. flaked rye
9.4 oz. Weyermann Oak Smoked Wheat malt
Hops and Other Spices (for 27 IBU total)
East Kent Goldings hops (27 IBU)
1.25 oz. (at 5.4% alpha acids), boiled for 60 min
0.20 oz. juniper berries, at whirlpool
0.42 oz. sweet gale, at whirlpool
Wyeast 3711 French Saision yeast
(make a 1.5-qt. yeast starter)
PROCEDURE
Mash at 154 °F. Boil wort for 60 minutes. Aerate wort and pitch yeast. Ferment at 68 °F. Allow temperature to free rise after 48 hours.
Inoculate with Brettanomyces and lactic acid producing bacteria and age in a gin barrel. As an alternative to barrel aging, soak oak cubes for 4–7 days in gin. Add about 2.5 oz. (71 g) of oak cubes to the fermenter 3–4 days before bottling.