The Hooded Order Belgian Quadruple All Grain Recipe
Belgian Dark Strong Ale
Yeast strains appear in order of our personal preference. We highly reccomend adding a gel ice pack to shipped orders containing liquid yeast.
Select Hops:
Tick the box to add the hops used in this recipe. If any are sold out, we recommend choosing a suitable substitute before checking out. You can use our Hop Substitution Chart to help find the right alternative.
Rich Belgian Quad, 9.8% ABV. Dark fruit, fig and caramel with a warming finish, best savoured over time.
Deep, rich, and complex, the Belgian Quadruple (or “Quad”) sits at the very top of the abbey ale family. Originating from the Trappist brewing traditions, quads are big, dark, malt-driven beers brewed by the monks.
The wider family of abbey-style beers includes Dubbels, Tripels, and Quads. Each respective step up represents more strength, depth, and complexity. Where Dubbels showcase dark fruit and caramel, and Tripels lean golden and spicy, the Quad is the ultimate expression abbey style; full-bodied, warming, and layered with notes of dried fruit, dark sugar, toffee, and subtle spice. Despite their strength, the best examples remain dangerously smooth, a testament to the monks’ skill in brewing great beers.
This beer has a large grain bill and will push a Grainfather G30 and Brewzilla pretty close to their maximum. If you are brewing using a gen 3 brewzilla we would recommend looking into a reiterated mash (double mashing) in order to fit all the grain in the malt pipe. This beer is also extremely strong and will need plenty of viable yeast - this is ideal for a starter.
We would also highly recommend bottle conditioning this beer for 6 months or longer. We have intentionally shot for a higher bitterness than is usually suggested, this is intentional as the IBU will decrease over extended periods of aging.
Vitals
Original Gravity: 1.089
Final Gravity: 1.014
IBU (Tinseth): 31
BU/GU: 0.35
Colour: 41.5 EBC
ABV: 9.8%
73% efficiency
Batch Volume: 21 L
Boil Time: 120 min
Mash Water: 24.89 L
Sparge Water: 10 L
Total Water: 34.89 L
Boil Volume: 28.92 L
Pre-Boil Gravity: 1.061
Mash
Temperature — 65 °C — 60 min
Mash Out — 75 °C — 15 min
Malts (7.13 kg)
5.4 kg (75.7%) — Joe White Maltings Pilsner, Malt Craft Export — Grain — 3.2 EBC
1.25 kg (17.5%) — Joe White Maltings Munich, Light — Grain — 17.7 EBC
300 g (4.2%) — Dingemans Aromatic Malt — Grain — 37.5 EBC
180 g (2.5%) — Dingemans Special B — Grain — 290 EBC
Other (800 g)
800 g — Candi Syrup Candi Syrup, D-90 — Sugar — 177 EBC
Hops (70 g)
70 g (31 IBU) — Saaz 4.5% — Boil — 60 min
Miscs
5.3 g — Calcium Chloride (CaCl2) — Mash
0.8 g — Epsom Salt (MgSO4) — Mash
2.8 g — Gypsum (CaSO4) — Mash
1 ml — Phosphoric Acid 85% — Mash
1 ml — Phosphoric Acid — Mash
Yeast
1 pkg — Bluestone Yeast Co. BSY-A006 Antwerp (Bluestone) 78% (reccomended but needs a starter)
5 pkg - Cellar Science Monk
4 pkg - Fermentis BE-256
Fermentation
Pitching Temp — 20 °C — 1 days
Main Ferment — 22 °C — 10 days
Main Ferment — 24 °C — 3 days
Diacetyl Rest — 26 °C — 2 days
Carbonation: 2.9 CO2-vol
Water Profile
Ca2+: 61
Mg2+: 2
Na+: 8
Cl-: 77
SO42-: 55
HCO3-: 16
This grain bill will be too large to mash all at once. Instead we recommend a reiterated mash process. We would highly recommend making a large yeast starter (around 5 litres) for this beer - failure to do so will lead to a stalled ferment and off flavours.
This beer is designed for extended bottle conditioning for 6 months plus, ideally much longer - hence the higher IBU. This bitterness will drop substantially over the course of aging.