From memory flaked wheat is for head retention, mouthfeel and flavour. I guess it depends just how big do you want you wheat beer to be on a wheat beer scale?
For me I like mine big, thick and hazy so 45% whole wheat and 5% flaked. Maybe even 40% & 10%!
I threw 25g of crushed coriander seeds in my witbier and I thought that was the perfect amount IMO, I also added some dark candi sugar which helped give it that distinctive Belgian flavour.
Belgium for me, some styles are so complex and malty with that lovely distinctive yeast flavour. Some examples are for me the absolute pinnacle on what represents the perfect beer.
And they must be treated with respect, on a drinking trip to Ghent we 'sampled' some quads and found one of our...
I have been using a hand capper for years and have learnt the hard way that a certain type of bottle doesn't work with them.
What you need to look out for is a long thick 'shaft' between the top of the bottle where the cap sits and the start of the neck. If the neck becomes thicker soon after...
Definitely 1 drop with a saison and without wanting to panic you, I have had a few saisons hover around 1.008-1010 for a few days only to slowly start dropping until finishing at 1.002 or 1.001
Please do not add more yeast with a saison! treat it like a wild yeast as they have the ability to ferment more complex sugars compared to most yeasts.
Despite dropping down to 1.001 I under primed my dark saison and its 'lively, but stable' after 6 months in the bottle
If I'm going for a traditional English ale I will always under prime, I will mash at a slightly higher temperature after about 30 minutes to give the beer slightly more body. Also I find they take longer when bottle conditioning, but eventually will produce a nice thick head without much...
I always batch prime and have tried a variety of sugars over the years with mixed results. When batch priming using boiling water I have found dextrose and icing sugar are prefect for an even carbonation amount per bottle when the solution is mixed well. The thicker and darker the sugar grain...