Style: Trappist Single
All StylesStyle Profile based on 202 recipes
BU:GU
0.54
Hops
4.5 g/L
Mash pH
5.55
Description
A pale, bitter, highly attenuated and well carbonated Trappist ale, showing a fruity-spicy Trappist yeast character, a spicy-floral hop profile, and a soft, supportive grainy-sweet malt palate. History: While Trappist breweries have a tradition of brewing a lower-strength beer as a monk’s daily ration, the bitter, pale beer this style describes is a relatively modern invention reflecting current tastes. Westvleteren first brewed theirs in 1999, but replaced older lower-gravity products. Style Comparison: Like a top-fermented Belgian/Trappist interpretation of a German Pils – pale, hoppy, and well-attenuated, but showing prototypical Belgian yeast character. Has less sweetness, higher attenuation, less character malt, and is more hop-centered than a Belgian Pale Ale. More like a much smaller, more highly hopped tripel than a smaller Belgian Blond Ale.
Examples: Achel 5° Blond, St. Bernardus Extra 4, Westmalle Extra, Westvleteren Blond
Typical Grain Bill
- 62%
- 26%
- 5%
- 3%
% of total grain weight across all recipes · sums to ~100%
Common Additions
- 75%
- 67%
- 46%
- 41%
% of Trappist Single recipes using each malt category (addition % in brackets)
Hop Usage by Addition Type
g/L · median with IQR range
Common Hops
- 31%
- 19%
- 16%
- 16%
- 13%
- 9%
- 6%
- 5%
- 5%
- 5%
% of Trappist Single recipes using each hop
Common Fermentables
- 14%
- 14%
- 8%
- 7%
- 6%
- 6%
- 6%
- 5%
- 5%
- 5%
Colour = malt category · bar = % of recipes
Common Yeasts
- 9%
- 7%
- 7%
- 6%
- 5%
- 4%
- 3%
- 3%
- 2%
- 2%
% of Trappist Single recipes using each strain
Typical Water Profile
median across recipes with a declared water profile
Similar Styles
Ranked by similarity across OG, IBU, ABV, hop rate, and grist composition.