I feel dumb now. Lol it is right on there.
Not gonna lie, that blows my mind. Does that mean all of their products are naturally carbonated? That seems mildly insane/impressive that they are naturally carbonating that much beer!
I feel dumb now. Lol it is right on there.
Not gonna lie, that blows my mind. Does that mean all of their products are naturally carbonated? That seems mildly insane/impressive that they are naturally carbonating that much beer!
Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed reading it, I should say that I enjoy your blog posts as well!
What are your thoughts on glycerol production. This is a somewhat elusive trait to find information on with specific strains, but it seems that saison yeasts are known for making more glycerol than others (helpful when your FG is below 1.006!). I'm assuming that's why the T-58 like yeast is in the cultures (albeit at what looks like a low ratio). This raises a good question though, "Is T-58 a saison yeast?" From NB's website: "A specialty ale yeast selected for its estery, somewhat peppery and spicy flavor." That sounds like a Saison yeast description to me!
My plan for my next NE IPA is to ferment in my conical, dry hop on day 2 (high krausen) and then say 2-3 days later once fermentation is slowing down, rack to a CO2-purged corny with the second dry hop already in there, attach the spunding and (hopefully) fully carb. I think 30 psi is needed at RT.
Its possible that one could use their standard NE IPA yeast in primary, rack to the keg, add a more attenuative Saison strain (T-58?) along with the keg hop and a spunding valve. In theory the Saison yeast would get to FG, carbonate and scavenge any residual O2.
I think the key here (to this hypothetical situation we have created) is that TH would be using dry yeasts, therefore, they wouldn't need to harvest yeast. Also on a brewery scale, imagine how much money would be wasted on priming sugar.
I've also wondered about glycerol. It would be cool to apply a similar technique towards finding strains that produce an abundance of it. I've read that some white wine yeasts are good producers.
T-58 isn't particularly attenuative (I think it's around 70%). I would imagine it's not the yeast that they finish with, if they're also using S-04. At least, they aren't finishing with only T-58.
As far as dropping the hops into a keg to be spunded, I've definitely thought of that! I was considering giving it a try, but was worried about keeping hops in a warmish tank for so many days. Since hop flavor extraction seems to occur more rapidly than previously thought, I was think of my last hopping being at like 4 or 5 points from terminal gravity, and then racking to the carbonation/serving keg at 3 points from terminal.
By adding sugar, you're also bumping ABV. I wouldn't call that a waste. By no means do I operate a brewery, but when considering the cost of sugar vs entirely new yeast, I'd imagine sugar is less expensive. Trillium has sugar listed as an ingredient in basically every beer that they make. My hypothesis was that they may be using a continuous drip of sugar to keep the the environment continuously low O2 during dry hopping.
Hello everyone! What an ace thread...so cool.
We are packaging 2800litres of a Citra IPA today. Combined 2 FV's in to 1 BBT. Exact same recipe except one was fermented with S-04 and one with T-58.
The signs are that this is an absolute banger of a beer. Opaque, juicy, fruit bomb. Sweetshop and sherbet on the nose and huge mango flavour with bread malts. Thick and creamy.
Next experiment is pitching S-04/S-33/T-58 at a ratio of 40/35/25 in another IPA.
Regarding natural carbonation...I seem to remember Hill Farmstead saying their beers were naturally carbed (which isn't the case)...but what I think is happening is that brewers are partially carbonating through spunding and then finishing off the process via a stone (or possibly head pressure) in the same tank. That way they can indeed say the beer is 'naturally carbonated'...and they get to emblazon the word 'naturally' on their growlers!
So cynical.
S-33 sounds interesting. Looking to add some apricot and a little banana bubblegum with this to the tart, juicy fruity T-58. S-04 is fairly restrained IMO...a little tangy fruit but mainly quite doughy.
T-58 absolutely is adding considerable mouthfeel.
***DNA Fingerprint Update***
I have some new yeast to analyze, courtesty of @suregork and @robopp, thank you both!
In the first gel, I am showing you the 4 strains that have been found so far in various TH cans (Julius, Green, Alter Ego and Doppleganger). Next to that gel (same DNA reference ladder) is a gel with WLP644, F1, F1/C4 and Conan (TYB), see this thread for more info: https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=577066. You can clearly see common bands between F1 and Conan, and that F1/C4 is quite different than F1. WLP644 doesn't seem to match up too well with either hybrid though?
One FV was fermented with S-04 pitched at 19 let rise to 21. The other FV was fermented with T-58 pitched and held at 25. Both had about 16HL of wort and we lose about 200 after dry hopping and transfer to bright. So combined they form 28HL ready to package. This is showing excellent promise thus far.
We regularly use: US-05, S-04, WY1318, Conan (BTW expect this in dry form very soon sshhhhhhhhhhhhh).
I remember reading somewhere that Treehouse use Fermentis yeasts and pitch fresh each brew. So I would say your red square strain will come from Fermentis. Strains from them you are yet to test:
F-2
BE-256
S-189
My hunch is possibly F-2. If however the red square doesn't show up from Fermentis...then I'm certain it will be from a dry yeast from another company. It makes no financial sense to be co-pitching wet and dry yeasts each brew.
Have you tested a can of Bright yet? To me that was very similar to Alchemist profile. Bready, peachy, bitter and clean. Don't think it is Conan but something slightly less estery. Wasn't so sure it was US-05 either.
Anyway...yeast is so much fun!
Cool, didn't realize you were in the latest send-out
What primer pair did you use for these? Here is my gel with delta12 and delta21 with the isolates of WLP644 and Conan that I used as the parent strains:
![]()
Edit: Hybrid H1 = F1
One FV was fermented with S-04 pitched at 19 let rise to 21. The other FV was fermented with T-58 pitched and held at 25. Both had about 16HL of wort and we lose about 200 after dry hopping and transfer to bright. So combined they form 28HL ready to package. This is showing excellent promise thus far.
We regularly use: US-05, S-04, WY1318, Conan (BTW expect this in dry form very soon sshhhhhhhhhhhhh).
I remember reading somewhere that Treehouse use Fermentis yeasts and pitch fresh each brew. So I would say your red square strain will come from Fermentis. Strains from them you are yet to test:
F-2
BE-256
S-189
My hunch is possibly F-2. If however the red square doesn't show up from Fermentis...then I'm certain it will be from a dry yeast from another company. It makes no financial sense to be co-pitching wet and dry yeasts each brew.
Have you tested a can of Bright yet? To me that was very similar to Alchemist profile. Bready, peachy, bitter and clean. Don't think it is Conan but something slightly less estery. Wasn't so sure it was US-05 either.
Anyway...yeast is so much fun!
To your observation that the gold star could be WB-06 hefeweizen (?!), others have reported excellent results using just hef yeast:
http://trinitybrewers.com/brews/ipa/julius-clone-treehouse-brewing-ipa/
Conan (BTW expect this in dry form very soon sshhhhhhhhhhhhh)
Anyway...yeast is so much fun!
Hello guys. I've read through this thread twice now as I'm so geeked out on what you're doing here. Trinity Brewers is my website, I haven't posted in here....
I haven't come across a can of Bright since I started harvesting yeast, but will keep that in mind.
That was my first thought after I had opened the link! This is weird, but my email notification of posting on this thread said @StinkyBeer had posted this link, did that get deleted? Or rather, is TrinityBrewers a user posting in this thread?
Lots of awesome here! You guys have me wanting to try a variant of these yeasts next brew.Hi Marshall! @marshallb
I stopped up at adventures in homebrewing today and picked up every fermentis dry ale yeast I could find. Tomorrow I'll brew a mainstay pale ale of mine and substitute the yeast so I can reflect on the new vs. the standard California ale V. Hooray for birthday brewing.
I picked up us04 us05 w33 t58 wb06 k97 packets.
I will pitch ratios of 50%us04, 25%w33, 25%t58 to get this rolling.
Hi Marshall! @marshallb
I stopped up at adventures in homebrewing today and picked up every fermentis dry ale yeast I could find. Tomorrow I'll brew a mainstay pale ale of mine and substitute the yeast so I can reflect on the new vs. the standard California ale V. Hooray for birthday brewing.
I picked up us04 us05 w33 t58 wb06 k97 packets.
I will pitch ratios of 50%us04, 25%w33, 25%t58 to get this rolling.
The growth rate of each strain will be different, right? It sounds like you may have to analyze your own batches once you've identified all the strains in order to see if you're hitting the "correct" final ratios
Love this thread. Ordered some S04, T58, and WB-06 and gonna give them a whirl this weekend 60/20/20. Does T58 have a known liquid equivalent? Just saying it is possible that they are using WLP007 and other white labs equivalents and we/you might be going down a rabbit hole with the dry yeast.
BRY-97 in my opinion suppresses hop flavor, I used it in what I guess would classify as an india red ale and honestly would never use it again. Had nice esters but the character I thought I would get was completely different.