• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

BlackMan Yeast

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Thanks Mors, I went ahead and rehydrated mine as well. Pitched G4 into my first berliner weisse style brew last night. A bunch of firsts for me on this brew- first berliner, first decoction mash, first no boil and first sour/lacto pitch! Hoping it turns out alright! :mug:
 
Brewed last night.
60% Vienna
20%Pils
15%wheat
5% oats
OG 1.048
12ibu from Herkules@60 and another 8ibu@20
Going to pitch American Sour Mix
 
Hi All,

I brewed a Gose and a Berliner with the G4 blend. Made a 2 litre starter 2 days before and split it between the fermenters. First 3 days where at 20c, very vigorous fermentation, I raised the temp to 30c to favour the lacto for the last 5 days. Took a sample last night and, I'm not really getting much sourness. PH was 4.1 on both, the Gose has the beginnings of a nice looking pellicle too. Someone said that the ale yeast in the blend was Alt, but, I'm getting some serious Hefeweizen aromas and tastes which I think will work well if it sours up much more. Am I wasting my time trying to maintain 30c or, should I just leave it at room temp (18c where I have it) and let it do it's thing for a few more weeks?
 
It's been 5 days at 30c badlee and not sour at all, a little tart but, I expected more. I'll keep it at 30 another 3/4 days and test again. I'll keep you posted.

Thanks,
Mark
 
Looking forward to an update Mark.
I will be checking on my A4saison tomorrow
 
Hey badlee, do you have any more info on Barrett's recommended process/temp schedule? Is it basically the same for the different blends or does it differ from product to product?

Thanks!
Blair
 
It differs by strain.
A4
Ferment for one week in the low 60s for a cleaner ferment or mid-upper 60s for some fruitiness and phenolics.
Then bring up into 80s for a few weeks for acid production.
 
A4 – does well with American pale grist (can do 20 bitter IBUs, does well with dry hops)

B4 – recommend simple saison 80% Pilsner 20% with any including adjunct (recommend up 15 bitter IBUs the remain aroma light flavoring. Also does good with dry hops.)

*
 
I do not have a ph meter,but according to the scientific tool known to most as my nose,is smell like it has sourness going on
 
Just found out about this today and I'm pretty excited to try. Glad he got a mention in the new BA magazine. Totally subscribing and interested to hear the results.
 
Just bottled today,three weeks in,after two werks at 31c.
Eartiness as in Dupont and a hint of tartness that I feel will come over more wiyh carbonation.
Wait again
 
Had to do it.
Cracked the first bottle after five days.
Very little tartness.
A little earth/spice a la Dupont.
Some sweet banana/clove like a hefeweizen yeast.
So,it is coming over like a Blonde.
A little let down as of now. It is not bad at all,a pleasant beer in it's own right,just not what I wanted of it.
Wait again
 
3 weeks is no time for a mixed fermentation sour. I would have let it go until it was sour then packaged it, maybe 6-8 weeks. It may not sour further in the bottle. If you want sour beer in 3 weeks, kettle sour with just lacto, then pitch yeast when it's a low enough ph.
 
Oh,I know how to get sour in a few weeks,no worries on that front @youranimpulse.
My point is that I was doing it acvording to the advice of the yeast producer.
Plan: brew one according to advice. Brew two according to gut
 
Right?
Was told to ferment at about 20c for a week and then let it warm to "room temperature" for a "few weeks" for acid production.
I thought I had temperature on my side. It has been 31c average day/night here,so thought it would boost the L A production
 
Tried another bottle,as there was something bugging me about the taste. It reminded me of something,couldn't put my finger on it ,but knew I had not had this "something" in a long long time.
Bollocking Hoegaarden!
Bloody well tastes just like it.
Not a bad thing,if you like that sort of thing,but alas,as I was expecting "Saison",****e! Rage!
My in-laws will love me for this........
 
Father-in-law: not half bad,this one. Bit of sourness to it!
Think I must have had the sour equivelant to lupilin threshhold shift: LAB perception shift
 

Latest posts

Back
Top