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Dry Yeast equivalents

Discussion in 'Fermentation & Yeast' started by boist, Dec 10, 2011.

 

  1. #1
    boist

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
    Guys,
    I wonder if anyone can point me to a table of dry yeasts and liquid yeasts that are the same (or very similar) strands. For example:

    Safeale US-05 = Wyeast 1056 = WLP0001
    Safelager 37/40 = Weihenstephan W34/70 (but what is it in WLP/Wyeast?)
    etc.

    Thanks
     
    ChuckCollins likes this.
  2. #2
    Guess42

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
    Did you try searching?
     
  3. #3
    boist

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
  4. #4
    windbreaker123

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
    There are some things that liquid yeast produce and dry doesn't. I know it sucks but what can you do.
     
  5. #5
    boist

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
    Sure. The question is what.
    Here's my quandary: Where I live it is impossible to buy liquid yeast. You can buy dry, or you can have someone hand deliver liquid for you from another country. My wife is going to be taking a trip to the states soon, so I'm going to ask het to bring me back some vials. But it seems silly to bring back something that I can already get here dry. So for example, I was going to ask her to bring me back some WLP001, but then I discovered I can get it here as US-05. So my question is what other liquid stands are also available as Dry strands?
     
  6. #6
    Calder

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
    There are very few liquid yeasts that are covered by dry yeasts:

    S-05 = 1056 = WLP001

    S-04 = 1098 = WLP007

    Notty = WLP039

    I'm not sure there are any more.

    You might be better off thinking about what type of beer you would want to brew, and finding what yeast you would need.

    Suggestions:

    Belgian yeasts are not covered by dry yeasts (Achouffe: WLP550/3522, Chimay: WLP500/1214, Duvel: WLP570/1388). All like fermenting hot. There is also 3711, a very agressive Saison yeast (not my favorate, but will really dry a beer out). And there are many more, all unique.

    Brett: I've had lots of fun fermenting with WLP650 as both a primary yeast and a secondary yeast. There are other Bretts too. You can't get anything like them as dry.

    Lambic mix: If you are up to the challenge.

    PacMan: Very attenuative American yeast. Similar to 1056, but more attenuative. I prefer it. You can also use it to do a pseudo larger as it ferments clean down to about 40 F.

    Wheat yeasts: I'm not a fan of wheat, but there are lots of different strains.

    Larger yeasts are poorly represented by dry yeast. Need to be able to ferment cool.

    European yeasts: There are lots of English, French, and German yeasts that provide their own characteristics to beers.
     
  7. #7
    sonex

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
    from my understanding 34/70=830 and 2124
     
  8. #8
    Teacher

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
    According to Brew Like a Monk and other sources, T-58 is from the Chimay strain. I've used 1214 and gotten very similar results.
     
  9. #9
    Denny

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 10, 2011
    Interesting. I've used T-58 a fair bit and it's always seems a lot tarter, more phenolic and less estery than 1214.
     
  10. #10
    brandonhagen1

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 11, 2011
    windsor/wyst1928/wpl002 close enough as far as i know
     
  11. #11
    boist

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 11, 2011
    Calder, thanks for the info and suggestions! For completeness sake let's see if I can make a table:

    Fermentis:
    US-05 - WYST1056 - WLP001
    US-04 - WYST1098/1099? - WLP007
    K-97+ - Wyeast 1007? - WLP320?/036?
    WB-06 - WYST3333 - WLP380 - Weihenstephan 66?
    T-58 - WYST3724/1214? - WLP565/500? - Chimay? / Saison Dupont
    S-23 - WYST2001?/2206? - WLP800?/820? *
    S-189+ - ? - WLP885 - Samichlaus
    W34/70 - WYST2124 - WLP830 - Weihenstephan 34/70

    Danstar:
    Nottingham - WYST? - WLP039
    Windsor - WYST1928?/1068? -WLP002
    Munich - WYST3638 - WLP351 **

    Still Missing:
    Danstar Diamond Lager
    Muntons Standard
    Muntuns Premium
    Cooper's

    + Yeast is marketed as "Craft Brewing" yeast (as oppose to home brewing) and may not be available in small packets
    * S-23 Seems to change its character depending on brewing temp. Fermenting clean at about 60F, and fruity at around 50F
    **Danstar Munich is reputed to be the same strain as 3638/351, but the drying process tends to result in a less phenolic profile


    Anyone can add anything else?
     
  12. #12
    Droot

    Brewing since 1991

    Posted Dec 11, 2011
    Can anyone confirm this? I love 1007!
     
  13. #13
    boist

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 11, 2011
    Droot,
    Look at the pdf I posted earlier in the thread, second page
     
  14. #14
    Denny

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 11, 2011
    Even if K-97 had the same origin as 1007, it doesn't produce the same results. Not as clean or as attenuative.
     
  15. #15
    Goblism

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 11, 2011

    according to the link is is similar to the 1007

    Would be nice to have a sticky with the yeast comparisons in a very clean format

    Here is the list I had saved, not sure how to make it look nice without spending some time on it

    Safale Wyeast White Labs
    US-05 1056 WLP-001
    S04 1098 WLP-007
    K-97 1007 WLP-320/WLP0036

    Safbrew
    S-33 1187 WLP-006
    T-58 3724 WLP-565
    WB-06 3333 WLP-380

    Saflager
    S-23 2001 WLP-800
    34/70 2124 WLP-830
    S-189 2278 WLP-885
    Danstar
    Nottingham WLP-039
    Windsor 1028

    Coopers Ale WLP-009
    Breferm Blanche WLP-410
    Brewferm Lager 2565 WLP-003
    Mutons ale 1968? WLP-002
     
  16. #16
    osagedr

    Recovering from Sobriety  

    Posted Dec 11, 2011
    Saflager S-189 is not the same strain as Wyeast 2278, but it is the same as WLP 885. There is no Wyeast equivalent.

    S-23 is not the same strain as Wyeast 2565. The former is a lager strain, the latter an ale strain.
     
  17. #17
    Goblism

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 11, 2011
  18. #18
    Droot

    Brewing since 1991

    Posted Dec 11, 2011
    I have switched back to dry yeast for now and Safeale is a big part of the reason. I also went from open ferment in a 1/2 keg to a sealed conical half as big. Just getting the hang of it. I do 6 gal partial mash with full boil instead of All grain with a huge liquid yeast starter. Its kind of new, but the Safaele S-04 is the balls. My basement is 58*f depending on where I put the fermenter. 2 hours instead of all day. So far Beer = Good

    I used 1007 because on the 6 day at 66 degrees, I could remove the pancake of yeast off the top of the open keg and put the beer in 5 gal kegs.

    Now I draw the yeast off the bottom and leave it another week or two.

    David Looking for K-97
     
  19. #19
    Teacher

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 17, 2011
    Granted, I've never done a side-by-side, so I can't claim to have compared them at the same time, but that was my general recollection. You might be right about the tartness, however, though I've not noticed it being more phenolic (could be a temperature thing), and the esters also seem about the same to me.
     
  20. #20
    Denny

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 18, 2011
    To me, 1214 banana/bubblegum bomb. I've never gotten that from T-58.
     
  21. #21
    mewithstewpid

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 20, 2011
    Woah woah can anyone else confirm T-58 is the DuPont strain wlp565????????
     
  22. #22
    Denny

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Dec 20, 2011
    I can't confirm it, but I could believe it based on the flavors of T-58.
     
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