I guess if you only use dry yeast you'll never really know how brewer's yeast strains differ so much. Interestingly, I've been experimenting with Lallemand dry yeast for several months. Not bad, but inferior to fresh wet yeast. I quit like Diamond Lager repitched, but WLP800 and WK833 blow it away. I find even fresh Lallemand 11g packs pitched in half batches (12L) take up to 48 hours before vigourous fermentation kicks off. More than 36 hours later than fresh wet yeast. So I'm a bit skeptical about claims one pack ferments 30L within 4 days. I do have a pack of Nottingham. I bet it struggles to finish half a batch of wort within a week.I am not knocking the yeast cell density thing but I use one 11g pack of dried Notty from Lallemand for most of my 30L batch beers and they start and ferment out great in four days. I do of course realise that liquid yeasts are available in greater varieties but I find the dried yeasts Lallemand sell are very good... I would be willing to bet 95or more percent of people would not know the difference between one yeast a to another in a proper blind test to be honest... but then again beer making is the new HiFi something to big up![]()
As aside note, my one pack of Verdant brew struggled to attenuate and basically ran out of gas. If the 55 billion cell thing is correct then I should have pitched two packs. I think this is a mistake by the dried yeast maker if they are going to strangle the cell count when the new liquid makers are going in the opposite direction.
You'll end up with more happy yeast cells if you make a starter. It will also decrease lag time. I typically always make a starter from liquid yeast, but not for dry. It will ensure you have yeast ready to chomp.Hi all,
maybe stupid question but is it the same to brew with 2 packs of liquid yeast without a starter or 1 pack and 2 L starter? Or should I always make 1pack=1L starter or 2packs=2L starter?
Thx
I guess if you only use dry yeast you'll never really know how brewer's yeast strains differ so much. Interestingly, I've been experimenting with Lallemand dry yeast for several months. Not bad, but inferior to fresh wet yeast. I quit like Diamond Lager repitched, but WLP800 and WK833 blow it away. I find even fresh Lallemand 11g packs pitched in half batches (12L) take up to 48 hours before vigourous fermentation kicks off. More than 36 hours later than fresh wet yeast. So I'm a bit skeptical about claims one pack ferments 30L within 4 days. I do have a pack of Nottingham. I bet it struggles to finish half a batch of wort within a week.
I do not know why you are being so aggressive . I have told you what I do .. you don't believe me Why? It is like I come on here to tell lies ? I have better things to do with my time than make up yarns. Even if you go to Lallemand's own website you will see that fermentation can be competed in this time. I repeat I have had no issue at all completing a 25 - 30l batch fermentation simply by following the rehydration advice and pitching the rehydrated yeast cells into the fermenter and fermenting at 20C. Any way you have a good day.What I'm doing mainly to not get a good fermentation within a few hours is not typing crap. It takes yeast cells, in fact, any healthy living cell, several hours to remodel metabolism to cope with a new environment. It's highly unlikely a dry yeast reaches any of level of fermentation within a few hours. The only time I've ever observed fermentation kick off so soon is when repitching freshly top-cropped yeast directly into a fresh batch of wort. Mainly because the 'memory' of the fermentation metabolic profile exists. The probability of this occuring with pitched dry yeast is close to zero. Ask any genuinely skeptical biologist with an idea
I'm not being 'aggressive' and the suggestion I am is a sad way to attempt to cover up what is clearly nonsense by any stretch of the imagination. Maybe you pitch cool and the FV wort warms over a few hours, producing some bubbling through an airlock? That kind of physics has nothing to do with fermentation. I have a fresh pack of Nottingham.I do not know why you are being so aggressive . I have told you what I do .. you don't believe me Why? It is like I come on here to tell lies ? I have better things to do with my time than make up yarns. Even if you go to Lallemand's own website you will see that fermentation can be competed in this time. I repeat I have had no issue at all completing a 25 - 30l batch fermentation simply by following the rehydration advice and pitching the rehydrated yeast cells into the fermenter and fermenting at 20C. Any way you have a good day.
If one wishes to look very closely at every word in various pieces of product information, it's plausible to conclude that Lallemand prefers rehydration over direct pitch.Do you want the yeast hydrated first or sprinkled on top of the wort?
In all honesty I find this very sad. I give an account of my particular experience and it is rubbished ... I do not know why.If one wishes to look very closely at every word in various pieces of product information, it's plausible to conclude that Lallemand prefers rehydration over direct pitch.
With regard to pitching Nottingham, Jambop did mention this earlier: "simply by following the rehydration advice".
What ever you decide to do, please provide complete recipe(s), good process descriptions, and appropriate brew day notes so that others can, if interested, try to re-produce your findings.
I freeze it immediately and boil it the morning of brew day. Pressure canning is definitely better if you have the time to do it. I need an assistant brewer.Thanks for your input. Be careful with the frozen wort. It is not food safe practice to just freeze the wort instead of pressure can it.
In all honesty I find this very sad. I give an account of my particular experience and it is rubbished ... I do not know why.
I have made four brews of late and all of the four brews had finished detectable fermentation iafter the the four days that I have said. I made the beers using a Grainfather S40 and a Brewmonk conical FV. I don't know why I need to in some way publish data... which at the end of the day is pointless because those data could be totally false. It is simply a reflection of my particular experience using this product it is not a wonder product but it has worked well for me. I particularly like the clearing rate of the yeast and the fact that when the beer is bottle conditioned I can pour the beer freely with nearly no yeast carried over into the glass the other thing is that in real terms the product is dirt cheap at €2.70 a pop at that price even adding two 11g packs would be cheap... I have never found the need though.