Given our current crop of warmish weather, I think my attempts at brewing a low-alcohol lager may have to wait a little while.
So, to best capitalise on the climate, I think I'll go for the opposite. I'm thinking a Chimay Blue clone. Quite possibly it's the polar opposite of a light beer in every way. And given the high gravity, I suspect this is going to need at least six months in the bottle to mature, so if I want a serious winter warmer, now is the time to brew.
My initial thoughts are to follow the recipe contained in Mike Rodgers-Wilson's book "Brewing Crafts" fairly closely. However, I'll throw the recipe up here for you guys to examine to see if there's any easy-ish improvements I can make. An all-grain is beyond my technology at this stage, but I'm happy to do an extract brew, particularly if the finished product is around 9.3%...

Here's the recipe, all honours to Mr Rodgers-Wilson:
Makes 15l.
Yeast starter made from a bottle of Chimay Blue
2.3kg LDME
30 black grain crushed
400g soft dark sugar
250g blended (not Eucalypt!) honey
40g Hallertau @ 30-40 min
20g Goldings @ 30-40 min
My only concern is a probable lack of head retention due to the alcohol content, although I don't recall Chimay having a massive head either.
Any thoughts?