Great thread, this thread plus Bob's thread on Bitter, with some experimentation helped me get that malt flavor.. Key elements in my view are: pitch adequate quantity ( 350 Billon cells per 11 gallons @ 1.044,) remove from yeast quickly, go light to zero flavor hops (any hops with boils greater then 10 minutes), Mash at 152 with 1.25 Qts/pound (or less).
I had so much much malt in my 1.044 OG brew that I cut it with sugar in subsequent brews and upped the IBU's to maintain the OG, but balance it. I often brew it at 1.039 without the sugar and it's British malty.
Here is what I do with 1968, I have a conical which makes it easy to get rid of the yeast/trub.
MO 86%
40L Crystal 7.5%
Sugar 6 %
IBU 38
EKG Hops for aroma at whirlpool
OG 1.044
FG 1.008
Pitch (don't skimp) at 62F and let it free rise to 66F, hold at 66F until it reaches 1.014 to 1.018 (3 to 4 days). Drop yeast/trub from the bottom of the fermenter. D rest and drive attenuation by raising temp to 69 F for 3 to 4 days. Drop yeast. Crash cool to 37 F under a continous blanket of CO2 for 2 to 4 days. Drop yeast, then Keg and force carbonate at 38 F for 7 days to desired CO2 levels. Serve at 51F.
For my tastes this is a near perfect brew and I thank all those who contributed to these to threads for helping me get there. What is the Key in my opinion???? ...I'm off the yeast and in the keg by day 8.
Great post!
How do you cold crash under a blanket of Co2?
For repeatability, I prefer to do a slow ramp rather than a free rise because a free rise is dependent upon the ambient temp, the activity of the yeast, etc. How long would you guess it takes to rise from 62 to 66?
Lastly, what water profile are you using?
...and I don't know if this has been mentioned recently, but Simpson's 70-80L crystal (even fermented with US-05) will get you closer to "that british taste" than anything you can do with domestic malts, perfect ferment or not. Simpsons wasn't available to homebrewers here when this thread was started and I brewed a lot of bitters and milds chasing that taste.
Thanks for the detailed info. I have a house bitter that I love but I am looking for a new version to try. I'm brewing an Irish stout this weekend, then this one.
If you guys have not already done so, check out the private collection yeasts from Wyeast. Three really nice English strains, including one of my personal favorites, Thames Valley II.
I haven't done again because I don't like the west yorkshire the second time around. Maybe there is a right way to harvest it but I couldn't find it.
West Yorkshire yeast is excellent for top cropping - skim the dark-coloured gunk off the top of the yeast when the krausen starts (usually at about 24hrs after pitching) and throw it away. Wait another 24hours then collect a jar of nice yeast off the top of the krausen. I have found that yeast collected this way doesn't like to be stored for too long though - ideally collect it and use it straight away.
Alternatively (this is how I do it now), make a starter with the smack pack, pitch 3/4 of the starter into the beer and use the other 1/4 for another starter.....etc....etc. It's cleaner (but less convenient) than using yeast cake.
I think the default posts per page of a thread is now 40 instead of like 10(?). After the update I looked for how to change posts per page but couldn't find it. I like 40 per page so it suits me.
Are you sure it is acetaldehyde and not fruity esters?Hi!
Today is day 22 of fermentation. I roused the yeast 3 days ago and raised the temp to 22C. According to iSpindel the beer continued to attenuate. I took a hydrometer sample today, it is now at 1.004 (90% attenuation). The taste is realy green, lot of acetaldehyde. I need to transfer the beer today do corny kegs, any advice how could I salvage this beer? Should I carbonate with addition of dextrose to promote the yeast (to clean up the acetaldehyde)?
When I worked for a "bigly" Brewer as an engineer, they had an acetaldehyde issue, and knew right away that it was insufficient oxygenation. The stones that sparge in the O2 were inserted the wrong way. A lot of English ale yeasts, however, can give a fruity taste to beer, especially young beer.Yeah, pretty sure. I transferred the beer to kegs 9 days ago and added some corn sugar. I tasted the beer yesterday, some acetaldehyde is still present but it is much better than before. Ideally I would let the kegs sit at room temperature for at least another week, but I need to bottle the beer in 3 days, so I am forced to move the kegs to the fridge tonight.
Given the low fg, I wonder if you maybe got some other microbe in there, maybe with the plastic spoon or maybe from a scratch on your plastic fermenter. I would finish the batch & see what it tastes like after a couple weeks.Thanks for the reply, next time I use this British yeast I will pay more attention to proper pitch rate and aeration. And maybe try the "semi open" fermentation - with the lid just loosely put on the fermentation bucket.
well, there is a chance of a cross contamination with yeast from the previous batch. In the previous batch I used WLP644 Saccharomyces Bruxellensis Trois, White Labs says it is a "diastaticus" strain. I am realy rigorous about sanitation ( I user paracetic acid ) but a cross contamination with this yeast would be a logical explanation of this long fermentation and very low FG. I could not detect any off-flavors in the taste except the acetaldehyde.Given the low fg, I wonder if you maybe got some other microbe in there, maybe with the plastic spoon or maybe from a scratch on your plastic fermenter. I would finish the batch & see what it tastes like after a couple weeks.
I'm just getting back into brewing again after a couple year hiatus and of course I'm back to the british beers. Currently planning to run some experiments on dual (or more)-strain ferments as that is a technique that seems surprisingly underused for british beer given their history. Also seems like a good way to tailor the yeast characteristics more to our liking rather than be tied to the limitations of one strain. For example - I really love the flavor of the Ringwood strain, but I always have a devil of a time getting the bastard to finish. So I'm going to pitch it along with CYA007 (same strain as Wy1335) to help it to dry out. Also really interested in throwing in a tiny bit of a Belgian or german yeast that would produce some isoamyl acetate and some bubblegum esters, as I've noticed them in some English beer at low levels and think it can add to the complexity. Don't really want any phenols, though, so I'm having trouble picking something. That may be a later experiment once I have some experience co-pitching CYA004 (Ringwood) and CYA007 (Wy1335[the dry half of Adnam's dual strain, apparently]). Anyway, lots of interesting stuff coming on that front.
Nice to see you back on the boards. Per characterful yeast, I've been brewing with a few UK commercial strains I got from NCYC and another UK yeast bank. The difference between the UK banked strains and what we get from WY and WL is striking, even for the supposed equivalent strains. Flavors are generally more complex and most show true top cropping ability. Ever see the Fullers strain produce a krausen like 1469? I suspect some of this is due to the difference in propagation medium and storage (wort v. molasses) and the fact that many of the US equivalent strains were from bottled yeast and not brewery deposited. Worth checking out if you want to take a "deep dive" into British yeast.