Charlie’s Gouden-Plenty Pils
Charlie’s Gouden-Plenty Pils
(5 gallons/19 L, partial mash)
OG = 1.053 FG = 1.012
IBU = 15 SRM = 5 ABV = 5.5%
Ingredients
3 lbs. (1.36 kg) German Pilsner (or lager) malt
0.5 lb. (0.23 kg) Carapils malt
0.5 lb. (0.23 kg) wheat malt
5 lbs. (2.3 kg) Pilsen liquid malt extract
6 AAU Hallertauer hops (30 min.) (1.5 oz./43 g at 4% alpha acid)
0.5 oz. (14 g) dried licorice root (0 min.)
1 qt. slurry of German or Bohemian lager yeast (such as Wyeast 2007)
7/8 cup corn sugar (if priming)
Step by Step
Crack malted grains. Heat 6 qts. (5.7 L) water to 135 °F (57 °C), mix in malt. Hold at 123 °F (50 °C) for 30 min. Apply heat to raise mash temperature to 150 °F (66 °C). Hold at 150 °F (66 °C) for 45 min. Add heat, raising temperature to 159 °F (71 °C). Hold 15 min. Wash grains with 6 qts. (5.7 L) water at 170 °F (77 °C). You should have at least 3 gal. (11 L) in your kettle
Add the liquid malt to the kettle and stir until fully dissolved. Bring wort to a boil. Boil 15 min., then add the Hallertauer hops. Boil 30 min. more, then remove the heat and add the licorice. Cover and steep for 30 min. before beginning to chill. Pour into your fermenter (straining out the licorice, if you can) along with enough water to make up 5.25 gal (20 L). When cooled to 65 °F (18 °C), pitch yeast.
Ferment cold (45 to 50 °F/7 to 10 °C) for two weeks, then rack to your secondary. Lager cold (35 to 40 °F/2 to 4 °C max) for six weeks, then warm to 65 °F (18 °C) for 24 hours. Prime with corn sugar, bottle, age warm for one week or keg and force carbonate. Lager for another 2 to 4 weeks if you so desire.
All-grain option:
All-grain brewers replace the malt extract in the partial mash with 10 lbs. (4.5 kg) Pilsner malt. Mash in about 4 gal. (15 L), sparge with 5 gal. (19 L), and time your boil and hop schedule to reduce volume to 5.25 gal (20 L).
Extract with grains option:
All-extract brewers can increase the liquid malt to 7.5 lbs. (3.4 kg), delete the Pilsner and wheat malts, but steep the Carapils in the brewing water as it warms to 170 °F (77 °C), then remove grains and discard.
Hops:
Use any German-type hop you like, but stay subtle. You want to emphasize the licorice as a fine aroma and flavor, and much more than 15 IBUs will overwhelm that.
Licorice:
I use real, dried, shredded licorice root, available from Brewer’s Garden (ask your homebrew shop). You can also find “brewer’s licorice,” which is a condensed, processed toffee-like stick that you break and/or shave to use. Dissolve it in the boil. Use as little as one-quarter of a stick, if that’s all you can find.
Yeast:
In the first few pilsners I made, I tried four or five different liquid yeasts from three different suppliers. I keep going back to Wyeast 2007 as the easiest to use and the most reliable, although Wyeast 2278 is also reliable, if a little more sulfury in the nose. The 2007, if worked up to a good-sized slurry, is a very clean yeast in terms of aroma, which is perfect for this recipe.
Written by Scott Russell
Licorice root provides a refreshing herbal spice for this Pilsner base beer.