Wheat beers are lighter in color and taste. Photo by D. Cubillas | SXC.


 
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February 2005

Last Updated February 2015

Product Reviews / Main Nibbles / Beer

Beers: Beer Types & Terms

Page 8: Beers ~ T To Z

 

This is Page 8 of an eight-page glossary of beers. Click on the black links below to visit other pages. Also see our many other food glossaries, chock-full of information about your favorite foods.

 

 

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TRAPPIST
Trappists are an order of monks who own five breweries in Belgium and one in The Netherlands. They produce strong (6% to 12% alcohol), top-fermenting brews. By law they have exclusive right to use the term “Trappist” in marketing their products. The generic term for beers made by monks of other orders is abbey-style.

TRIPLE or TRIPEL
A tripel, or triple in English, is a style of Belgian beer that is a strong, pale ale. The term “triple” refers to the brewing process, in which up to three times the amount of malt is used than in a standard “simple” abbey-style beer. Traditionally, triples are bright yellow to gold in color, a shade or two darker than the average Pilsener

 

TRIPPLE BOCK
Not related to tripel, above, tripple bock is a the most intense, highest alcohol bock beer, with alcohol levels up to 30% ABV (60 proof). Bock beer is strong, dark sweet, heavy beer, brewed from barley malt. More about triple bock beer. See also bock and double bock.

TURBID
A cloudy beer. Turbidity is the cloudiness or haziness of a fluid caused by large numbers of individual particles that are generally invisible to the naked eye.

Before the invention of filtration in 1878, most beers were turbid. In German, the term is naturtrüb, meaning naturally turbid’.

VIENNA BEER
Originating in Vienna, Austria, Vienna beer is a very sweet, lightly hopped, light-bodied beer.

 
Sam Adams Utopias, a triple bock beer. Photo courtesy Boston Brewing Company.

 

WEISSE or WEISSBIER or WEIZENBIER or WITBIER

Weissbier is the German word for white beer, a pale brew made from wheat. Weizenbock, a bock beer made from wheat, is sometimes served as a Christmas beer. It is one of the world’s oldest beer styles, typically two parts wheat malt to one part barley malt, which creates a light-bodied beer, about 4% to 5% alcohol. The Dutch/Flemish (Belgian) term for Weissbier is witbier. Belgian witbieren (the plural of witbier) often are brewed with spices such as coriander, or fruits such as bitter orange peel, giving them slightly fruity nuances. In Germany, there are two styles: Weizen in the western and northern regions and Weissbier or Weisse in Bavaria. See also Berliner Weisse, Gruut, Hefeweizen, Lambic and Kristallweizen. Weissbier is popularly paired with Weisswurst (white sausage), a fresh, mildly spiced pork and veal sausage.

WEIZENSTARKBIER
A high-alcohol wheat beer.

 

WHITE ALE

An unfiltered Belgian-style spiced ale, pale and cloudy. As a crisp white ale, it has a high level of wheat, and sometimes oats. The spices typically include orange peel and coriander, with other fruits, spices or herbs added by the brewmaster. At bars and restaurants, it is sometimes served with a lemon wedge.

WHEAT BEER

A beer that is brewed with a significant proportion of wheat, which provides a distinctive pale color, creamy texture and a light, sweet flavor. Some have overtones of banana and clove. The best-known wheat beers are Belgian witbier and German Weissbier. See Weisse.
 

WORT

The fermentable sugars made from the mash. See beer-making for the entire process of beer-making.

  Wheat Beer
Wheat beer served with baby Swiss, Gruyère and pretzels. Photo courtesy of Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board.


YEAST

Yeast cells love to eat sugar. In doing so, they cause the wort (the sweet liquid from the water and heated grains) to ferment, which produces alcohol and carbon dioxide. Yeast also imparts flavor and can be used to give a fruity taste to beer.

ZYMURGY
The science or study of fermentation.

 

 

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