Old lambic is blended with newly fermenting young lambic to create this special style of lambic. Gueuze is always refermented in the bottle. These unflavored blended and secondary fermented lambic beers may be very dry or mildly sweet and are characterized by intense fruity-estery, sour, and acidic aromas and flavors. These pale beers are brewed with unmalted wheat, malted barley, and stale, aged hops. Sweet malt characters are not perceived. They are very low in hop bitterness. Diacetyl should be absent. Characteristic horsey, goaty, leathery and phenolic character evolved from Brettanomyces yeast is often present at moderate levels. Cloudiness is acceptable. These beers are quite dry and light bodied. Vanillin and other woody flavors should not be evident. Versions of this beer made outside of the Brussels area of Belgium cannot be true lambics. These versions are said to be "lambic-style" and may be made to resemble many of the beers of true origin. Historically, traditional gueuze lambics are dry and completely attenuated, exhibiting no residual sweetness either from malt, sugar or artificial sweeteners. Some versions often have a degree of sweetness, contributed by sugars or artificial sweeteners. Competition organizers may choose to subcategorize this style into A) Traditional and B) Sweet ## Artificial sweeteners are sometimes used in some brands.
OG: 1.044-1.056 SG
FG: 1.000-1.010 SG
Alcohol: 6.8-8.6 %abv
IBU: 11.0-23.0
Color: 6.0-13.0 SRM
CO2: Unspecified
OG | FG | Alcohol | IBU | Color | CO2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.044-1.056 SG | 1.000-1.010 SG | 6.8-8.6 %abv | 11.0-23.0 | 6.0-13.0 SRM | Unspecified |