This thread is gold
I started brewing a few years before becoming a 7 year expat for a London based firm. I drank a lot of british cask ales. This all makes a lot of sense.
You can go to three different pubs on the same street in London, order a Wells Bombardier at each one and get three different beers. Fresh high volume places are a slice of heaven in a glass. Some are just thin and losing their life others start to turn sour. I've bought loads of store bought ESB, Hobgoblin, London Pride, OSH, Old Peculiar in the UK and the bottled stuff is always a muted cousin of the cask versions.
Seems like these yeasts attenuate forever depending upon O2, FG and temp. For cask ales, they want it to ferment slowly for carbonation and O2 will be introduced with the engines. Makes sense that when you homebrew and bottle you introduce enough O2 and priming sugar to restart a fermentation and change the beer. I would tell you the off flavors that have been described on this thread from bottled beers with 1968 seem pretty familiar to me. Old cask ales. I've had more than one pint I've sent back, and even been warned a few times during the pour to give it back if I don't like it.
Conversely, when you are kegging it at low temps and starving it of O2, it stops and keeps it's profile. Much like high volume pubs that are going through casks regularly.
Have a pale 1469 fermenting now and an ESB recipe in the wings. I had a Timothy Taylor one off summer cask ale in a pub around the corner once and it was fantastic. Blond low abv ale, apples and pears (sound familiar?) with a bright grapefruit finish that was almost Americanish. Going for a cleaner version of this with EKG's and Saaz. I will definitely get the character of the yeast. The sample out of the kettle was the cleanest I've ever done. Malt and hops and nothing else. Not coincidentally, it's the first time I treated my RO water. I'm going to top crop it today, about 36 hours into the ferment. Thanks to this thread, I'm going to make sure I get enough in the jars to repitch.
I can control the ferm temps, but I bottle everything right now, so I'm going to have to figure that part out. I may have to pull out the old corney kegs and get a CO2 setup for it before I do the ESB.
Thanks to the founders of this thread, it's still gold 8 years later.
I started brewing a few years before becoming a 7 year expat for a London based firm. I drank a lot of british cask ales. This all makes a lot of sense.
You can go to three different pubs on the same street in London, order a Wells Bombardier at each one and get three different beers. Fresh high volume places are a slice of heaven in a glass. Some are just thin and losing their life others start to turn sour. I've bought loads of store bought ESB, Hobgoblin, London Pride, OSH, Old Peculiar in the UK and the bottled stuff is always a muted cousin of the cask versions.
Seems like these yeasts attenuate forever depending upon O2, FG and temp. For cask ales, they want it to ferment slowly for carbonation and O2 will be introduced with the engines. Makes sense that when you homebrew and bottle you introduce enough O2 and priming sugar to restart a fermentation and change the beer. I would tell you the off flavors that have been described on this thread from bottled beers with 1968 seem pretty familiar to me. Old cask ales. I've had more than one pint I've sent back, and even been warned a few times during the pour to give it back if I don't like it.
Conversely, when you are kegging it at low temps and starving it of O2, it stops and keeps it's profile. Much like high volume pubs that are going through casks regularly.
Have a pale 1469 fermenting now and an ESB recipe in the wings. I had a Timothy Taylor one off summer cask ale in a pub around the corner once and it was fantastic. Blond low abv ale, apples and pears (sound familiar?) with a bright grapefruit finish that was almost Americanish. Going for a cleaner version of this with EKG's and Saaz. I will definitely get the character of the yeast. The sample out of the kettle was the cleanest I've ever done. Malt and hops and nothing else. Not coincidentally, it's the first time I treated my RO water. I'm going to top crop it today, about 36 hours into the ferment. Thanks to this thread, I'm going to make sure I get enough in the jars to repitch.
I can control the ferm temps, but I bottle everything right now, so I'm going to have to figure that part out. I may have to pull out the old corney kegs and get a CO2 setup for it before I do the ESB.
Thanks to the founders of this thread, it's still gold 8 years later.