Style: Trappist Single

All Styles

Style Profile based on 202 recipes

BU:GU

0.54

Hops

4.5 g/L

Mash pH

5.55

Style Guidelines BJCP 2015 Beer
OG
1.044 1.054
1.051
FG
1.004 1.01
1.01
IBU
25 45
27
ABV
4.8% 6%
5.5%
SRM
3 5
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

% of total grain weight across all recipes · sums to ~100%

Common Additions

% of Trappist Single recipes using each malt category (addition % in brackets)

Hop Usage by Addition Type

g/L · median with IQR range

Bittering
0.38 g/L 1.64 g/L
0.75 g/L
Flavour
0.35 g/L 1.44 g/L
0.82 g/L
Aroma
0.39 g/L 1.37 g/L
0.84 g/L
Whirlpool
0.4 g/L 2.08 g/L
1.23 g/L

Common Hops

% of Trappist Single recipes using each hop

Typical Water Profile

Ca²⁺ 75 ppm
Mg²⁺ 5 ppm
Na⁺ 12 ppm
Cl⁻ 50 ppm
SO₄²⁻ 62 ppm
HCO₃⁻ 25 ppm

median across recipes with a declared water profile

Similar Styles

Ranked by similarity across OG, IBU, ABV, hop rate, and grist composition.