Sheldon
Well-Known Member
I have mine lagering for another 8 days and then bottling (no room in the kegorator), but sharing the batch with a fellow home brewer. Looking forward to sampling.
Hi Everyone, what do you think would be the outcome if I pitched on top of a cider slurry brewed with S04?
I'm planning to brew this tomorrow morning and I was toying with pouring this onto the slurry from my raspberry apple cider. I brewed the cider with S04 and its been in primary about 3 weeks. I figured I'd rack into secondary tomorrow and re use the yest for the October fast.
Would there be any detriment to flavors by doing this?
I do have a packet of dry yeast on hand so i don't "have too" but the point of October Fast is to pour on a viable yeast cake to speed things up a touch. Would there be a lag from the yeast adjusting to the wort sugars? would this defeat the purpose and introduce sour cider or off flavors?
What do you all think?
That's interesting to me. I found Wyeast kolsch to leave a horribly fruity flavor while s04 left a great malty backbone with no fruity esters. What temps are you fermenting this at?Kegged my 2nd try at this recipe after fermenting for 5 weeks. This time around I used WLP029 german ale/kolsch yeast and it turned out great. Much dryer (OG: 1.058 FG 1.009)and slightly less "fruity" flavor compared to last time with S-04. I think I'll stick with WLP029 for future batches. Cheers.
That's interesting to me. I found Wyeast kolsch to leave a horribly fruity flavor while s04 left a great malty backbone with no fruity esters. What temps are you fermenting this at?
Yeah, I haven't been a fan of the crazy fruity esters that come with wyeast' kolsch in this beer over 60°, the WL version must be a different strain. I keep my s04 at 65° (fermentation temp not ambient) for this brew and have never gotten anything fruity. If your ambient temperature is 68-69 my bet is your fermentation is in the low 70's which would explain why you are getting that with s04Where I keep it in my basement stays steady around 68-69 F.
Kegged my 2nd try at this recipe after fermenting for 5 weeks. This time around I used WLP029 german ale/kolsch yeast and it turned out great. Much dryer (OG: 1.058 FG 1.009)and slightly less "fruity" flavor compared to last time with S-04. I think I'll stick with WLP029 for future batches. Cheers.
S-04 is ok. If you can lager, this recipe makes a delicious Marzen. After making it with wlp830, i can't go back to an ale yeast. Maybe try 66-67 to try to cut back on any fruitiness.Brewed this tonight. Never used S-04 before. Is everyone still going by the original post and fermenting this at 68?
Going to try this recipe, but what yeast can I use with a fermentation in the upper 50's and still be ready to drink in 5-6 weeks? My chamber is set there because of some other lagers I got fermenting so I am committed to the temp for a while.
@BierMuncher and friends,
Love all your posts and recipes. I am making your Oktoberfast tomorrow and I am short some grain. I bought ingredients for about 4 batches and must of mis calculated what I needed. With that said I do not have any Pilsner malt, but I have a lot of Munich and Vienna left over. Here was my version recipe from all I have read about your recipe:
36% PILSNER
21% VIENNA
17% MUNICH
10% CRYSTAL 20L
8% MELANOIDEN
5% CRYSTAL 40L
4% CARA-PILS
So how can I use my Vienna and Munich surplus to make up for not having Pilsner. Not too worried about brewing to style. Thoughts by anybody? Thanks in advance.
I remade a simplified version of this one about 8 weeks ago and tapped it for a neighborhood party this past (Halloween) weekend.
I put it on tap upstairs next to my Wit.
49% 2-Row
23% Vienna
18% Munich
10% Crystal #40
It was a huge hit. Cleared up nicely and very quickly. Smooth flavor.
If you can't get aromatic or aren't a big fan...this simpler recipe gets 6 thumbs up from my neighbors.