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

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Bottling - Strains that Drop Clear

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Epos7

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 5, 2016
Messages
428
Reaction score
88
Location
Bruville
I'm still bottling, and for a lot of styles, I like a nice clear beer. I typically fine with gelatin in the fermenter, cold crash for a few days, then bottle. Sometimes this produces a crystal clear beer when poured carefully off the yeast. Sometimes it doesn't. The beer can be nice and clear transferring from the fermenter to the bottling bucket, but once the yeast go back to work it hazes up again.

So far the best yeast for producing clear bottled beer that I've come across is Nottingham.

WLP029 has produced mixed results, with most attempts being somewhat hazy.

S05 typically drops nice and clear, but is a very powdery yeast so extra caution is needed when pouring off the yeast.

S04 is a mixed bag. Sometimes it's nice and clear, sometimes not.

1968 - used once, still had some haze. Really tasty yeast though.

I'm curious what other bottlers experiences have been with various yeasts. Do you have a favorite for producing nice clear bottled beer? I'm in search of a new yeast for making lagers. I've used WLP029 for all my attempts so far. I might give 34/70 a shot next.
 
Nottingham finish quick, clean and drops very clear for me.
 
I use 34/70 for most of my lagers. It clears very well. Also compacts well in the bottle to make pouring easy.

I usually gelitan fine and cold crash. Maybe let the cold crash go an extra few days.

If the beer is clear when warm and gets hazy when cold you may have chill haze. Look into that.
 
I use 34/70 for most of my lagers. It clears very well. Also compacts well in the bottle to make pouring easy.

I usually gelitan fine and cold crash. Maybe let the cold crash go an extra few days.

If the beer is clear when warm and gets hazy when cold you may have chill haze. Look into that.

Good to know re: 34/70. Think I'll try that next.

I've been cold crashing for 4+ days. I package cold, and the beer is clear at that point. It's the yeast activity during bottle priming that's making it cloudy, I think.
 
Back
Top