Juniper Wild Ale Recipe - How to Make Juniper Wild Ale (2024)

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5 from 6 votes

By Hank Shaw

April 17, 2017 | Updated June 17, 2020

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Juniper Wild Ale Recipe - How to Make Juniper Wild Ale (2)

This beer began as pure experiment. It has become an obsession.

The entire reason I started brewing beer is to incorporate foraged elements into the brew. Mostly this means adding either wild adjunct grains, like wild rice, or botanical additions that contribute flavor. I do this with fresh, green fir tips in my fir tip ale, and with juniper berries in my NorCal gose beer.

Anyone who knows me know I love the aroma and flavor of juniper. Well, as it happens, juniper berries are coated in wild yeast. Yeast that can brew beer.

Working with wild yeast is an adventure. The bloom on grapes, plums and juniper berries is a clear indicator that wild yeasts are present (the bloom itself is not yeast, however, it’s a waxy substance that just tells you the wee yeasties are present.) Most fruits have yeast on them, as do most flowers.

Harvesting that yeast is as simple as dropping the fruit into something fermentable. Like beer wort.

I did this with some juniper berries I’d gathered in the high Sierra Nevadas. The same berries I made the gose from. Only this time I dropped them into a test wort — really some leftover I had from an experiment with a wild rice ale; that experiment continues. Sure enough, I got a nice ferment! It smelled nice, and I tasted the resulting beer, and it was good, even when flat.

So I ramped up the experiment and made a gallon tester batch. I added a bunch of chopped up needles from our local bull pine, Pinus Sabiniana, and when the beer was ready to bottle, a touch of 88% lactic acid I’d bought from the brew shop, as well as some oak chips I’d boiled first, so they would not add any other microbes to the party. Why? It just seemed right.

And it was. I brought Junipine to Sam Horne’s, a local beer geek bar in Folsom, California where I hang out at. I gathered some influential beer people: brewers as well as serious connoisseurs. Everyone thought this was my best beer yet.

Drinking this beer will transport you into a cool Sierra Nevada day. You can absolutely pick up both the pine and juniper. The yeast character is there, but not so strong as it is in, say, a saison. It is a largely red ale, hearty without being overly malty or hoppy. The oak is subtle, adding a little backbone and vanilla — but you’d never know it was there if I didn’t tell you. Finally, the lactic acid is not nearly enough to make this a proper sour beer, but it seems to amplify all the music coming from the glass.

Junipine is the best beer I’ve yet made.

Here’s how you can make your own version of a juniper wild ale.

Juniper Wild Ale Recipe - How to Make Juniper Wild Ale (3)

To make a this wildale, you needfirst to be set up for brewing. If you are, you’re good to go. If you’re not, there is equipment you need to do this right. At a minimum, you will need:

  • A large pot, or several slightly smaller ones. I used a regular stockpot plus another soup pot before I got abrew kettle.
  • A thermometer. I highly recommend a laser thermometer. I use this oneJuniper Wild Ale Recipe - How to Make Juniper Wild Ale (4).
  • A gram scale. Yep, precision matters in beer making. This is the scaleJuniper Wild Ale Recipe - How to Make Juniper Wild Ale (5) I use.
  • Something to ferment in. I prefer glass carboys, which are large jugs, but some people prefer buckets.
  • An airlock. You need to keep air off the fermenting beer at the same time you let CO2 escape. The airlock does the trick.
  • A strainer. A fine-meshed strainer removes debris, called trub, and the stray bits of seasoning and hops.
  • Sanitizer. Yes, you need it. There are any number of good ones out there, but I use either IodophorJuniper Wild Ale Recipe - How to Make Juniper Wild Ale (6)or Star-San.
  • Bottles, caps and a capper, or a kegging system.
  • And, of course, you need malt and hops. Your nearest homebrew store will have all of this stuff, or you can buy it online.
Juniper Wild Ale Recipe - How to Make Juniper Wild Ale (7)

Estimated stats on this recipe:

Estimated Alcohol by Volume (ABV): 5.4%
IBUs: 25, but the pine needles and juniper berrieswill add additional hoplike bitterness and aromas
Original Gravity and Final Gravity: 1.055, going down to 1.016

To Make the Yeast Starter:

  • Boil about 3 cups malt extract (I used light dry malt extract), then cool it to about 85°F.
  • Drop in a handful of foraged juniper berries, dry or fresh (Not sure if store-bought have yeast on them still)
  • Cover whatever container you are using. If a Mason jar, screw on the lid just barely.
  • Put in a cool, dark place and check it every day. Shake it around. In two to four days, you should see yeast activity.

5 from 6 votes

Juniper Wild Ale

This is a red ale with moderate carbonation, a slight bit of tartness -- but not enough to make it a true sour -- and with strong aromas of juniper, with a backnote of pine. I am still primarily an extract brewer, but feel free to modify this to be an all-grain ale if you want to. One alternative in terms of malt is to use Munich instead of Maris Otter, which I did in the first incarnation of this beer. Note that the yeast on my juniper berries is slow and steady, so you should not need a blow-off tube.

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Course: Drinks

Cuisine: American

Servings: 3 gallons

Author: Hank Shaw

Prep Time: 1 hour hour

Cook Time: 1 hour hour

Total Time: 2 hours hours

Ingredients

  • 3.15 pounds Maris Otter extract (56%)
  • 1.25 pounds rye malt extract (22%)
  • 1 pound dry light extract (17.7%)
  • 4 ounces Special B malt (4.5%)
  • 28 grams Fuggles hops, added at 60 minutes to go in the boil
  • 1 Whirlfloc tablet, added at 10 minutes to go (helps clarify beer)
  • 60 grams juniper berries, half added with 5 minutes to go, half added at knockout
  • 58 grams chopped pine needles, added at knockout
  • 1 quart juniper starter
  • 1 ounce oak chips, boiled for 1 minute first
  • 6 teaspoons 88% Lactic acid (optional)

Instructions

  • Steep the Special B malt. Put the malt into a grain bag or tie it up loosely in cheesecloth and cover it with 3 quarts of water. Bring this to 155°F to 165°F over medium heat and hold it at this temperature for 1 hour. Remove the bag and set it over the pot in a strainer. Pour 2 quarts of water heated to 170°F over it to rinse the grain. Let the bag drain for 10 minutes, then remove. Discard the grain or feed it to animals.

  • Start the boil. Add 2 more gallons of water to the pot and bring this to a boil. Add the hops and set the timer for 1 hour.

  • With 30 minutes to go, add all the extracts and stir well.

  • If you are using it, add the Whirlfloc to the boil along with the wort chiller, if you have one. This will sanitize the chiller.

  • With 5 minutes to go, add half the juniper berries.

  • Knockout. Turn off the heat and add the final addition of juniper berries along with the chopped pine needles.

  • Crash chill the wort. Use your wort chiller to chill the wort back to 75°F or cooler, depending on how warm your tap water is. Or, put the pot in a cooler with lots of ice water in it. Use a clean spoon to create a whirlpool in the wort, which will help it chill faster. Hopefully you will see gnarly bits in the wort that look like egg drop soup, or separating miso in soup: That's cold crash trub, and seeing it means you will have a clearer beer.

  • Move the wort to the fermentor. Add the juniper yeast starter to the fermentor; I use a glass carboy. Pour the contents of the pot through a sanitized strainer into the fermentor. If the strainer gets all gunked up with trub, remove it before continuing. Put a sanitized airlock on the fermentor and put the beer in a place where it can ferment cool, ideally 66°F to 69°F. Leave it there for 2 weeks.

  • Add the boiled oak chips to a new sanitized carboy and rack the beer into it. I do this only if there is a lot of crud in the fermentor. If it's OK, I just add the oak chips to the primary fermentor. Either way, let the beer finish fermenting for 10 more days.

  • Bottle or keg the beer. If you are bottling, you want to add enough priming sugar to the batch to get about 2 volumes of CO2, about 1.8 ounces or 51 grams for 3 gallons. Add the lactic acid to the bottling bucket. Bottle condition the ale 2 weeks before opening the first bottle. This beer ages well.

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe? Tag me today!Mention @huntgathercook or tag #hankshaw!

Categorized as:
Featured, Foraging

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

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Juniper Wild Ale Recipe - How to Make Juniper Wild Ale (2024)

FAQs

How much juniper to add to beer? ›

The oily and spicy aroma marry well with the malt and many kinds of hops. A few times I have added berries to a keg to invigorate a too bland or tired ale. Start dry junipering experiments with 0.75 g of berries for a liter of beer. Juniper berries are often sold as a commodity of unknown origin.

How to make ale from scratch? ›

To make ale, you make a wort (lushly flavoured malty water) and ferment it with yeast. In this recipe, the wort is simply the liquid produced by boiling up the malt, barley, hops and sugar as required. The yeast is added later. Basic proportions (for five gallons) are as below...

What are the ingredients in ale? ›

Belgian and French Origin Ale Styles

Popular in Eastern Europe, these beverages are brewed with malt barley, wheat, oats, or rye. They are commonly flavored with additive sugar and either orange or lemon peels to yield a citrus-like flavoring.

What flavor is wild ale? ›

Wild ales are a bit like the natural wines of the beer world. They're fermented with wild (or natural) yeasts, imbuing them with a funk-fuelled flavour profile—think earthy, sour cherry, barnyard, bacon, or desiccated pear.

What percentage is juniper beer? ›

juniper
ABV
1Põhjala Cellar Series - Laugas Retired 12.3%12.3%
2Uiltje Mind Your Step (Maple Edition) 14.0%14.0%
3De Molen Freya & Thor Retired 8.9%8.9%
4Uiltje Mind Your Step 14.5%14.5%
46 more rows

What alcohol does juniper make? ›

Gin is made by distilling a neutral grain alcohol with juniper berries and other botanicals to make the fragrant spirit we all know and love. The botanicals are infused into the raw spirit to release their flavours.

How long does it take to ferment ale? ›

Here's a chart with all of the guidelines we've covered here:
AleLager
Dark1 week primary2-3 months primary
3-4 weeks secondary9 months secondary
High Alcohol2 weeks primary2-3 months primary
9-12+ months secondary9-12+ months secondary
4 more rows
Oct 25, 2019

Can you make ale without hops? ›

Until the 17th century, hops weren't allowed in English ales, and Germany didn't require hops in its official brewing laws until 1906. For many centuries, a vast majority of the beer made around the world used other spices and botanicals for flavor. That kind of botanical beer is called a gruit (pronounced groo-it).

What makes ale different than beer? ›

Ales, typically called “bitter,” are differentiated from beers by possessing a hop flavour that is more intense than that of beers due to the increased amount of hops used in the brewing process of ales. This is because the amount of hops used in the brewing process of ales is greater than that of beers.

What alcohol did Vikings drink? ›

The Vikings drank strong beer at festive occasions, together with the popular drink of mead. Mead was a sweet, fermented drink made from honey, water and spices. Wine made from grapes was also known of, but had to be imported, from France, for example.

What grain is ale made from? ›

Most breweries will use barley as their main grain. Why? Because it has an excellent starch to protein ratio and provides the enzymes needed for the third stage of brewing, called mashing. You can't just chuck barley in the tanks though.

What minerals are in ale? ›

Beer contains minerals such as magnesium, potassium, selenium, and B vitamins. It can also contain antioxidants from hops. People use beer to prevent heart disease and stroke.

How are wild ales made? ›

These special beers are produced using a process known as spontaneous fermentation, where the unfermented wort is exposed to the air at near boiling temperatures and allowed to cool overnight. While the wort cools, microbes such as brewer's yeast, brettanomyces, and lactic acid bacteria make their way into the liquid.

Are all wild ales sour? ›

We prefer to think of sourness, or acidity, as a component of a beer, not an overarching style. This is for two major reasons: tartness is one of many flavors in wild beers and by no means captures the entire flavor profile of the beer. Reason two is that all wild beers aren't necessarily sour!

What is American wild ale style? ›

American wild ale is a sour beer brewed in the United States using yeast or bacteria in addition to Saccharomyces cerevisiae for fermentation. Such beers are similar to Belgian Lambic and Oud bruin, and typically fermented using a strain of brettanomyces, resulting in a "funky" flavor.

How much juniper berries are in 5 gallons of beer? ›

Re: Juniper berries

Its a great summer beer. I generally use 1/4 oz. of berries per 5 gallon batch, added to the last 15 minutes of the boil.

How many juniper berries to use? ›

All that aside, the flavor of Juniper berries should be very strong. I usually only add about 4-7 of them to a large pot of rotkhol. As such, if you're getting little flavor from 10 berries, it may be that you don't want to use these particular berries because they're just too bland.

How much terpenes to add to beer? ›

Suggested use rates are 0.01% to 0.02% (w/v) of terpenes to beer.

How do you prepare juniper berries for consumption? ›

Juniper Berries?
  1. Crush the berry or toast it; crush it if you want a stronger flavor.
  2. Rub it into the meat with some ginger or garlic.
  3. Sear the meat.
  4. Deglaze the hot pan (add some liquid to loosen up the meat flavors at the bottom of the pan).
  5. Add some eggplant or a tart apple, such as a Braeburn or a Granny Smith.
Jun 14, 2013

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