Recipe

Corsendonk Monk’s Brown Ale clone

Corsendonk Monk’s Brown Ale clone

(5 gallons/19 L, partial mash)
OG = 1.068  FG = 1.012
IBU = 23  SRM = 20  ABV = 7.5%

Ingredients:
4.25 lbs. (2 kg) pale malt
0.5 lb. (0.23 kg) dark caramel malt (90° L)
0.5 lb. (0.23 kg) Special B malt
0.5 lb. (0.23 g) kiln-coffee malt
5 lbs. (2.3 kg) amber dried malt extract
4 AAU Styrian Goldings hops (60 min.) (1.33 oz./38 g at 3% alpha acids)
4 AAU Saaz hops (30 min.) (1 oz./28 g at 4% alpha acids)
White Labs WLP530 (Abbey Ale) or Wyeast 1214 (Belgian Abbey Style Ale) or Fermentis BE-256 yeast
3/4 cup corn sugar (if priming)

Step by Step:
Heat 8 quarts (7.6 L) water to 163 °F (73 °C). Crush grains and add to a large grain bag. Submerge in the liquor, making sure the grains gets stirred enough that there are no dough balls. Hold mash at 152 °F (67 °C) for 90 minutes. Wash grains with 12 quarts (11 L) of 170 °F (88 °C) water. Add DME, stir well, bring to a boil. Add Styrian Goldings hops, boil 60 minutes. Add Saaz hops, boil 30 minutes. Remove from heat. Add to fermenter along with enough pre-boiled and chilled water to make up 5.25 gallons (20 L). Cool to 70 °F (21 °C), pitch yeast. Ferment at 68 °F (20 °C) for two weeks, rack to secondary and condition cool (50 °F/10 °C) for three to four weeks. Keg and force carbonate or prime with corn sugar, bottle and age three to four weeks at 45-50 °F (8-10 °C). Serve in a tall, fluted, stemmed glass.

All-grain option:
Replace the DME with another 8.5 lbs. (3.9 kg) pale malt and 1 lb. (0.45 kg) medium caramel malt (60° L). Increase mash water to 16 quarts (15.1 L) and sparge water to 20 quarts (19 L). Mash time and temperatures will be the same. Proceed as above from boiling.

All-extract option:
Omit pale malt. Steep caramel, Special B and kiln-coffee as above in 3 gallons (11 L) at 150 °F (66 °C) for 30 minutes. Remove grains. Increase DME to 7.25 lbs. (3.3 kg), and proceed as above from boiling.

Issue: November 2000

Corsendonk is an Abbey beer, not a Trappist beer. This designation means the beer is brewed not at an abbey, but under license from — or at least in the style of — a Trappist monastery. In the case of Corsendonk, the name is taken from an Augustine priory that produced beer from the 1600s until the 1780s. Whether the Augustine brothers brewed anything remotely resembling modern Corsendonk is debatable, but they have licensed their name to the beer since 1982.
– Brouwerij Bios, Ertvelde