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How to make gluten free beer

0 · Nov 5, 2010 · 8 Comments

gfzing.com gluten free beer At gfzing.com we have tried all the commercially available gluten free beers.  Our favorites were those made by Green’s – there are three that are imported in to the U.S., and in our area they generally sell for a mind-boggling $7/bottle.  This was the motivating factor behind a successful attempt at home brewing gluten free beer, the techniques of which are outlined here. A reasonable glass of gluten free beer (in the weissbier or weiss beer style), can be made for less than a dollar a bottle after start-up costs.  The beer is similar to the St. Peter’s Sorgham Beer from Suffolk England.

The major difference between most  fine artisanal beers and gluten free beer is that the ordinary beer is made with malted barley and wheat, and the gluten free beer cannot contain either barley or wheat.   Therefore, the gluten free brewer must rely on other malted grains. The ingredients for gluten free beer are available from home brewing shops.  The two tricky items to locate are the sorghum syrup, which lately we have had to purchase online from morebeer.com, and the gluten free brewing yeast.  The actual link for purchasing the syrup is here.

To make home brewed beer, you should first read some of the fine homebrewing websites and chats on the net, and learn the basic technique.  You are going to make a sort of soup called wort, and then ferment this soup with yeast in a large container with an airlock.  When it has finished fermenting, it gets bottled with a little “priming sugar” added to each bottle to cause another fermentation in the bottle – this produces the carbonation.  An excellent discussion with photos is available at WikiHow.

These instructions are provided here for use by adults of legal brewing age.

Recipe from gfzing.com for about 48 twelve ounce bottles of gluten-free beer requiring 2-3 hours of cooking time and about 7 weeks from starting the process to pouring:

Ingredients:
Malt Base – 6lb Sorghum Extract

Specialty Grain –

  • 1lb Flaked Maize
  • 1/2lb Whole Sorghum (for toasting)
  • 1/2lb gluten free Oats (for toasting) – optional

Specialty Sugar – 1/4lb Belgian Dark Candi Syrup (this is a product that is worth the trouble of obtaining – it can be ordered online)

Hops –

  • 1 oz UK Northern Brewer Leaf hops (bittering)
  • 1oz Cascade hops (aroma)

Yeast- Notthingham Yeast (check for gluten free status on the package)
Other-

  • 1/4 tsp Irish Moss
  • 3/4 oz Coriander Seeds
  • 3/4 oz. Bitter Orange Peel (in the event of a beer emergency, you can use the zest of one fresh orange)
  • 8oz Malto-dextrin (a weird, nearly flavorless material that makes a smooth “mouth-feel”)
  • 15 black peppercorns

Other: Priming sugar (about 1 cup for five gallons) dissolved in a couple of cups of water

Instructions:
Toast Whole Sorghum & gluten free Oats in the oven for 20 minutes @ 375 F.

Grind toasted Sorghum & Oats using a grain mill that is only used for gluten free grains, and then combine these with flaked maize.
Maize, Oats and sorghum go in a muslin bag in one and a half gallons cold well water in a large pot – large enough to hold at least 3 gallons.
Heat to 160F, hold at this temperature for 10 minutes.
Remove grains (the muslin bag full of grain will have swelled considerably) and discard.
Add Sorghum extract & Belgian Dark Candi syrup to the grainy water, stir to dissolve. If you have no Belgian Dark Candi syrup you may be tempted to use molasses.  Our advice – don’t use molasses because it will impart a distinctive molasses flavor to the finished beer.  If you must substitute for the Dark Candi syrup, try dark brown sugar or panela.
Bring to boil. ALERT: at this point, there are 60 minutes left in the cooking process. All the times listed next to the ingredients below are the total cooking time for that ingredient. When we say “set the timer” that is to indicate the time between steps.

Start proofing yeast in a cup of water – Nottingham yeast (marked gluten free).
While grainy water and sugars boil, add the following for the minutes indicated (this is a standard beer recipe convention, and you have to study on how beer is made so that this series of instructions will make sense):

  • 1 oz. Northern Brewer Hops (60 min)
  • Set Timer for 45 minutes

When timer goes off, start adding the following ingredients and cook them for the amount of time indicated:

  • 1 ounce Cascade hops (15 minutes)
  • Set timer for 5min, when timer goes off, add
  • 1/4  tsp Irish Moss (10 minutes)
  • Set Timer for 5min, when timer goes off, add
  • 1/2 lb. Malto-dextrin mix with cold water first (5 minutes)
  • 3/4 oz coriander seeds (5 minutes)
  • 3/4 oz bitter orange (5 minutes)
  • 15 black peppercorns(5 minutes)
  • After 5 more minutes, all the cooking is done.

The total cooking time, from the time an ingredient is added to the end of the cooking is show in parentheses next to each ingredient. This is how beer-making recipes are generally written. The instructions about “set the timer for X minutes” are our own addition and show the time between steps. So, the Northern Brewer hops go in, then you wait 45 minutes and add the Cascade Hops, then wait 5 minutes, then add the Irish Moss etc. The last 4 ingredients all go in at once, and they only cook for the last 5 minutes of the boil.

Pour wort through a fine strainer  in to 2 gallons of cold water in a sterilized 6 gallon fermenter.

Add cold water to increase to 5 gallons total volume in the fermenter (it helps to mark the fermenter at the five-gallon level so you know when you have added enough water).
Cool to 72 degrees F.
Measure the starting specific gravity and record.  It should be around 1.040.
Add  the  proofed yeast, give a stir, cover the fermenter and add an airlock.  This mixture should ferment for two or more weeks. This beer will not bubble as vigorously as a barley or wheat beer – it is a gentle fermentation and does best at around 70 degrees.
After the primary fermentation, rack off the beer in to another vessel, add the dissolved priming sugar, give the mixture a vigorous mixing, and bottle in sterilized bottles. Cap the bottles with new caps (you cannot re-use caps).  The beer will be ready to drink in about 3 weeks.

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Comments

  1. Brian says

    February 24, 2011 at 5:44 pm

    Ok, I am very new to brewing beer. I was diagnosed with Cialacs about a year ago and crave an ice cold beer. I ordered a kit from Midwest supplies along with all of the ingredients in this recipe. This will be my first attempt at brewing. The recipe seems really thorough but the time values are confusing, starting with the Northern hops for 60 minutes. Does that mean you put it in after the Belgian dark candy syrup and sorghum syrup boil for 60 minutes and then let it boil for 45 minutes before adding the next ingredient? Than the next ingredient cooks for 15 minutes and then I set my timer for 5 minutes, so that’s a total of 20 minutes. Than at the last part of the ingredients there is a string of 5 minute intervals. I take that as to say put them in every 5 minutes. If you can simplify it I would appreciate it or give me a link or book suggestion to educate me on the beer brewing convention.

    Reply
    • ABD says

      February 24, 2011 at 7:44 pm

      Hi Brian –

      Only a few weeks away from that ice cold beer! Ok, here’s the scoop: The total cooking time, from the time an ingredient is added to the end of the cooking is show in parentheses next to each ingredient. This is how beer-making recipes are generally written. The instructions about “set the timer for X minutes” are our own addition and show the time between steps. So, the Northern Brewer hops go in, then you wait 45 minutes and add the Cascade Hops, then wait 5 minutes, then add the Irish Moss etc. The last 4 ingredients all go in at once, and they only cook for the last 5 minutes of the boil. Let us know if that helps!

      We also added some text in bold : ALERT: – look for that in the text as it tells you when the 60 minute “boil” starts.

      Reply
  2. Cory says

    January 14, 2011 at 7:45 am

    Be careful on the yeast you use. Many yeasts are grown on malt (gluten containing) substrates. Safale makes a great one for this type of brew. S-05 will work fine. Happy brewing!

    Reply
    • ABD says

      January 14, 2011 at 5:40 pm

      Cory – excellent point about the yeast. The Nottingham yeast is marked gluten free on the package – whatever kind is used, it is important to read the label carefully!

      Reply
  3. Alex says

    December 19, 2010 at 12:51 pm

    I looked over the recipe and there are several interesting points that you make including the use of peppercorns and also the use of maltodextrine was spot on. Using the maltodextrine increases mouth feel and also creates a nice head that is close to regular beer. Also the use of a water dispenser jug in the place of a glass carboy can save a lot of money. I am on the fence though as to your use of grains. Maize, sorghum, and oats. These grains contain no enzymes and according to the recipe were not toasted in the fashion of crystal malts or long enough to majorly increase the color of the brew.

    Substituting a pound or two of rice syrup for sorghum also can help counteract the mineral taste that sorghum lends.

    Reply
  4. ABD says

    November 6, 2010 at 9:10 am

    Hi Joey –

    The recipe makes about 48 bottles give or take, and expenses are a little less than a dollar per bottle after start-up costs. The largest brewing expense is for the sorghum malt.

    If you save beer bottles that can be re-capped (not the twist-off kind), the start-up equipment will run you between $100 and $160. The start-up equipment includes: 6 gallon Food grade fermenting bucket with lid, 6-gallon glass carbuoy, airlock, siphon and hose, C-brite cleaner, hydrometer and tube, thermometer that will measure 70 and 160 degrees fahrenheit, bottle capper, bottle-cleaning brush, new bottle caps. The grain mill we use is the Victoria Grain Mill, which adds about $60 to the start-up costs, but makes the whole process so much more fun!

    Reply
  5. CARLA SPACHER says

    November 6, 2010 at 2:24 am

    Wow! What a production! You must have fun making and test-tasting!

    Reply
  6. Joey says

    November 5, 2010 at 9:04 pm

    Hi GF-Zing,

    I have never brewed beer but you are correct. So far, Green’s is my favorite as well but it is pricey. You may be convincing me to try brewing here. Sounds painless. So how many bottles does this make and what did it end up costing you a bottle all said and done?

    Joey

    Reply

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