Gueuze is traditionally produced by mixing one, two, and three-year old lambic. "Young" lambic contains fermentable sugars while old lambic has the characteristic "wild" taste of the Senne River valley. A good gueuze is not the most pungent, but possesses a full and tantalizing bouquet, a sharp aroma, and a soft, velvety flavor. Lambic is served uncarbonated, while gueuze is served effervescent. IBUs are approximate since aged hops are used; Belgians use hops for anti-bacterial properties more than bittering in lambics. Products marked "oude" or "ville" are considered most traditional.The BJCP does not allow the full textual descriptions to be included in other publishings, go to Gueuze on their site for details.
OG: 1.040-1.060 SG
FG: 1.000-1.006 SG
Alcohol: 5.0-8.0 %abv
IBU: Unspecified
Color: 3.0-7.0 SRM
CO2: Unspecified
OG | FG | Alcohol | IBU | Color | CO2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.040-1.060 SG | 1.000-1.006 SG | 5.0-8.0 %abv | Unspecified | 3.0-7.0 SRM | Unspecified |