
When was the last time anyone tried making a fruit beer?
#1
Posted 21 April 2017 - 07:46 AM
#2
Posted 21 April 2017 - 07:52 AM
I've never tried. closest would be a bit of orange peel in a belgian beer.
#3
Posted 21 April 2017 - 08:04 AM
#4
Posted 21 April 2017 - 08:07 AM
A long time ago with this beer www.brews-bros.xyz/topic/71124-an-upcoming-golden-ale I added some peach extract and it was a real hit. I plan to make a peach sour or blonde ale this spring. I have 10#'s of frozen peaches that I need to use up.
#5
Posted 21 April 2017 - 08:16 AM
I have used some extracts that are okay. There was a Crosby & Baker (forget which flavor) that was better and I also found some McCormick raspberry extract at the grocery store that actually made a decent beer. But you haven't made one with real fruit yet? I think that's the challenge right there. I'm envisioning an amber-colored beer hopped once at 60 minutes to maybe 20 or 25 IBUs with a clean hop. I want the fruit to be subtle but I'm not sure how much to use in 5 gallons. I'm thinking just one pound of pureed strawberries.A long time ago with this beer www.brews-bros.xyz/topic/71124-an-upcoming-golden-ale I added some peach extract and it was a real hit. I plan to make a peach sour or blonde ale this spring. I have 10#'s of frozen peaches that I need to use up.
#6
Posted 21 April 2017 - 08:29 AM
I've done a strawberry cream ale, watermelon (like 21st Amendment) and pineapple. Except for the watermelon, I do a combo of puree (made from fresh fruit) and extract.
#7
Posted 21 April 2017 - 08:35 AM
If you had a ballpark for how much fresh fruit in 5 gallons, what do you suppose it would be? Also, at what point did you add the fruit, was there a secondary fermentation and did it dry out your beer?I've done a strawberry cream ale, watermelon (like 21st Amendment) and pineapple. Except for the watermelon, I do a combo of puree (made from fresh fruit) and extract.
#8
Posted 21 April 2017 - 08:37 AM
I have used some extracts that are okay. There was a Crosby & Baker (forget which flavor) that was better and I also found some McCormick raspberry extract at the grocery store that actually made a decent beer. But you haven't made one with real fruit yet? I think that's the challenge right there. I'm envisioning an amber-colored beer hopped once at 60 minutes to maybe 20 or 25 IBUs with a clean hop. I want the fruit to be subtle but I'm not sure how much to use in 5 gallons. I'm thinking just one pound of pureed strawberries.
Oregon Puree was my closest to real fruit
#9
Posted 21 April 2017 - 08:41 AM
If you had a ballpark for how much fresh fruit in 5 gallons, what do you suppose it would be? Also, at what point did you add the fruit, was there a secondary fermentation and did it dry out your beer?
I add after about four days. For the pineapple and strawberry, about 48 ounces. Then at kegging, I add a small amount of extract
#10
Posted 21 April 2017 - 09:34 AM
Made far more meads with fruit than beer. That said, strawberries would be one of the last fruits I would use again, right next to raspberries. So difficult to get the essence of the fruit to come through without resorting to extracts. If you have a bunch of strawberries you want to use, scrub clean, dry, place in freezer bag for at least a week (two would be better) and add in close to or after yeast exhaustion. Freezing breaks down the skins and lets the aroma and taste leech out more easily. Never done this with beer but with meads, I'd run the mead through a coarse filter post primary and add the fruit in secondary. Might be a bit much for beer though.
With beer, maybe add some type of clarifier that would take the yeast out of suspension, transfer and add fruit?
Edited by armagh, 21 April 2017 - 09:35 AM.
#11
Posted 21 April 2017 - 09:36 AM
Made far more meads with fruit than beer. That said, strawberries would be one of the last fruits I would use again, right next to raspberries. So difficult to get the essence of the fruit to come through without resorting to extracts. If you have a bunch of strawberries you want to use, scrub clean, dry, place in freezer bag for at least a week (two would be better) and add in close to or after yeast exhaustion. Freezing breaks down the skins and lets the aroma and taste leech out more easily. Never done this with beer but with meads, I'd run the mead through a coarse filter post primary and add the fruit in secondary. Might be a bit much for beer though.
would just buying frozen strawberries work? I would think they clean those pretty well.
#12
Posted 21 April 2017 - 09:37 AM
Yes, store-bought frozen fruit works fine.
#13
Posted 21 April 2017 - 09:39 AM
Yes, store-bought frozen fruit works fine.
I'm just thinking b/c they are likely slightly cheaper. I buy them for making smoothies.
#14
Posted 21 April 2017 - 10:19 AM
I'm kinda doing one now. In the swag bags for PNWHC there was dried Spanish orange peel and blood orange puree. So I'm doing an orange IPA with both.
#15
Posted 21 April 2017 - 10:24 AM
that sounds like a fruit beer I would like.
#16
Posted 21 April 2017 - 10:33 AM
#17
Posted 21 April 2017 - 10:47 AM
#18
Posted 21 April 2017 - 10:59 AM
#19
Posted 21 April 2017 - 11:02 AM
#20
Posted 21 April 2017 - 12:08 PM
Strawberry flavor is notorious for being difficult to get into the beverage. I once made a 5 gallon batch of mead with 18# of fresh picked strawberries in it. The aroma was amazing and you could smell the strawberry from the glass at 5 ft. away. Tasty mead but very little strawberry flavor at all. Also if you try to just add more strawberries to account for their subtlety you will be adding a significant amount of water to your beer as they are mostly water.
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