After attending the SF Beer Week I am on a mission to brew a fuller body/taste table beer in the low 3% ABV range. I found this recipe online and am intrigued but welcome your thoughts and input. I am not too familiar with using rye. I am targeting something easy drinking but not thin and/or watery.
What I discovered trying to do the same is that maltster matters. I didn’t have much luck with malt from the usual big companies. Once I started using craft malt it all came together. When you use less amount of ingredients you get less flavor, so every ingredient needs to pack a punch. In your recipe, I’d to for either wheator oats, not both. Neither has a big flavor. Maybe some crystal or Munich instead.
Currently in the discovery phase of brewing low ABV British/English/Scottish beers. From what I have read, the use of caramel/crystal malts will give that boost of flavor. There is also a school of thought that the use of those malts should be heavy handed but with judicious balance using abundant English hops.
I think it’s unnecessary. When I was developing my American mild recipe, I found that with a careful choice of malt, mash temp, and yeast, I got great mouthfeel.
The lowest ABV beer I have attempted had a starting OG of 1.020. 50/50 English pale ale malt and Briess carapils. Mashed hot single infusion at 162. 1968 yeast(one smackpack in 15 gallons)and a large dry hop(16 oz).
It finished at 1.010 and was quite drinkable. mashing hotter or adding some Munich malt were ideas for getting a higher final gravity.
3711 is a great choice for a low gravity beer. It leaves a lot of mouthfeel behind along with some acidity. The only thing to be aware of is that it will ferment bone dry (95-97% attenuation in my experience), so you need to target a lower starting gravity than you think. You don’t need all the adjuncts or maltodextrin. A flavorful pilsner malt with maybe 30% flaked wheat targeting an OG of 1.025-1.030 should work just fine, although admittedly I haven’t gone lower than 1.035 or so.
Thanks for all the info gents. I went with some good craft malts (mostly from Mecca) and replaced the wheat with some crystal malt. I ended up going with a dry yeast - LalBrew Farmhouse due to some availability issues. I will dry hop with an ounce of Lemon Drop. Brew day is tomorrow!