I still remember my first experiences with lager. The very first was a sip of my dad's Old Milwaukee when I was eight; I can't say it agreed with me. In college in Boston, Sam Adams frequently showed up at parties, and while it was one of my first welcome introductions to craft beer, I can't say I was really taken with it. And at the tender age of twenty one, I was offered my first Bud by the drummer of a band for whom I was working merch; the fact that it had about the same taste as a glass of water did not make a great impression. Following experiences like this, my initial homebrewing instinct was to stick to ales; they were by far what I preferred to drink. While I've had a few decent craft lagers over the years, I was never swayed to try making one myself.
That was, until I spent a week in Santiago, Chile last October. Chilean beer is currently experiencing a craft renaissance, but the traditional beers of the country (and many other South American countries) are German lagers. I had a number of really exceptional lagers while there, but the one that really nailed it for me is the one pictured here: deeply malty and supremely drinkable. It wasn't too hard a sell sitting in an outdoor cafe in downtown Santiago, enjoying the Southern Hemisphere's early spring weather. Unfortunately, I can't remember the brewery that produced it, so I couldn't look into it further. But it was the beer that finally inspired me to really give lager a shot at home.
Lacking a lot of lager knowledge, I couldn't decide if the beer from my memories of Chile was a Vienna lager or a Munich dunkel. Digging on darker beers for the winter months, I decided to follow the road to München. (Looks like the inspiration is more a Vienna, though; that may be the next up, then.) Nearly entirely Munich malt, with just a pinch of dehusked Carafa for deeper colour. A very light brush of neutral bittering hops, with Hallertauer to finish. Not knowing my lager yeasts, Wyeast's Munich Lager strain seemed like an easy go-to for the style; building a proper starter took some time, but was well worth it to have a good pitch of yeast.
Brewday went smoothly, leaving my only other big worry being my ability to actually lager, which I did in my swamp cooler with water along with a bunch of ice and ice packs. I was shocked when I realized I'd made it a full month keeping the beer at a fairly constant low- to mid-30s F with this method. While it's not perfect--I could stand even more malt character--this could be the start of a long, positive relationship of lager in my homebrewery.
Primavera en Santiago - Munich Dunkel
Batch size: 5.5 gallons
Projected OG: 1.059
Projected SRM: 13.8
Projected IBU: 25.4
Boil time: 60 minutes
Brewhouse efficiency: 87%
Grains
98.8% - 10 lb Weyermann Organic Munich
1.2% - 2 oz Carafa Special II
Hops
.3 oz Magnum (13.5%) (60 min)
2 oz Hallertauer (3.9%) (15 min)
Yeast
WY2308 Munich Lager - 4l, 3-stage starter on stirplate
Extras
1 tsp Yeast nutrient (10 min)
1 tsp Irish moss (10 min)
Water additions (mash)
3 gal distilled water
1 g Gypsum
1 g Salt
Brewday: 21 September 2013
Mash: 152F for 60 minutes.
Pre-boil volume: 7 gallons
Pre-boil SG: 12P (1.048)
Fermented in swamp cooler at 50F.
24 September 2013: Definite smell of active fermentation. No sulphur yet, just yeast churning away. Give it two weeks, then pull from swamp cooler for diacetyl rest.
9 October 2013: Diacetyl rest at ambient (65-70F).
16 October 2013: Lagered with ice bath in swamp cooler for 4 weeks.
FG:1.016
ABV: 5.6%
Bottled: 21 November 2013
Warmed to room temperature for several days before bottling.
Bottled with 4.1 oz table sugar and rehydrated champagne yeast.
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