ErieShores
Well-Known Member
Thanks Sleepy. In past experience, I've noticed that Nottingham really does a good job cleaning up after itself, a characteristic that I understand that a Kolsch yeast does not possess.
Anybody have any alternate yeasts to use at high temperatures. During these warm months I am pretty stuck at about 70 degrees.
I was thinking trying US-05 for a clean flavor, or potentially a california common lager yeast. I would age it for a while, and could cold condition for a long time. Would I get a similar flavor, or should I just wait for cooler weather?
Not sure what happened here, tastes like a nice chardonnay..fruity and a bit tart. followed the recipe to a T. Fermented mid 60's...cleared quicky, looked beautiful...bottled at 5 weeks. I guess i see what happens after a few weeks in the bottle, but i'd be shocked if these flavors retreat.
http://www.wyeastlab.com/rw_yeaststrain_detail.cfm?ID=144Beers will exhibit some of the fruity character of an ale, with a clean lager like profile.
I'd lean towards the Liberty. Hops don't play much of a role in this style, except to balance the beer. As long as you maintain a 2.5 to 1 (OG to IBU) ratio and keep this puppy malty (sweet), the hops really don't matter. :rockin:
crazyirishman34 said:I guess that my question would be why Kolsh and not a Munich Lager?
E-rok said:quick question, this recipe requires a 90 minute mash and a 90 minute boil? How would I maintain temperatures in my mash tun over 90 min? I tend to find they drop about 5 deg over 60 min.