Pitch a large amount of yeast (2 packs if you have them) and dont hurry to get it into the fermenter until the wort is nice and cool. Be patient, and dont take any short cuts.
Lager yeast is your best option - traditional anyway. You can use either s-189 or w 34 / 70. My preference would be to use your farmed yeast - that way you'll have fresh dried yeast on hand for another brew, or brewmergency. You'll need about 300mls of yeast slurry to innoculate this wort, so if you have that much - get it started (in a starter) and pitch when its ready. If you dont have that much slurry - you can increase your cell count with large starters, or just pitch your 34 / 70.
Ingredients:
2.5 kg Rye Malt
1.5 kg Munich Malt
1.3 kg German 2-row Pils
.3 kg Caramunich® TYPE II
.060 kg Carafa Special® TYPE III
28.0 g Tettnanger (5.2%) - added during boil, boiled 60 min
1.0 ea White Labs WLP300 Hefewizen Ale
00:16:43 Mash In - Liquor: 11.32 L; Strike: 58.18 °C; Target: 52.0 °C
00:31:43 Protein Rest - Rest: 15.0 min; Final: 51.4 °C
00:31:43 End Protein Rest - Heat: 0 min; Target: 51.3 °C
00:32:43 Infusion - Water: 3.93 L; Temperature: 99.0 °C; Target: 62 °C
01:02:43 Saccharification Rest - Rest: 30 min; Final: 61.0 °C
01:03:43 Infusion - Water: 7.79 L; Temperature: 96.7 °C; Target: 72 °C
01:33:43 Second Saccarification Rest - Rest: 30 min; Final: 71.0 °C
01:49:34 Mash Out - Heat: 15.9 min; Target: 78.0 °C
02:34:34 Sparge - Sparge: 9.41 L sparge @ 76.7 °C, 26.86 L collected, 45.0 min; Total Runoff: 27.57 L
Thanks to Brendan and Stu for holding onto some Rye Malt for me so that I could brew this.
It's a pretty standard brew, so I'm sitting on the bench whether or not to blog it so... a couple questions:
1 Do you want a blog of this?
2 If so, what so you want me to focus on?