http://www.brewersguardian.com/index.php/hop_bine_brewing_blogs/1451.html
Can someone explain to me his argument? Cause I'm not buying it.
Can someone explain to me his argument? Cause I'm not buying it.
His point seems to be that you can produce the same flavor profile with most strains by adjusting the malt, pitching rate, aeration, etc. That's mostly true. You could take, say most English ale strains, and by manipulating the factors around the yeast produce nearly identical yeast flavor profiles. You could take Belgian strains and do the same thing. Take one of the trappist or abbey strains and ferment it cool and it's very similar to a wit strain. Ferment a wit strain warm and it's more similar to the trappist or abbey strains. Very few strains are really so unique you could not reproduce the flavor profile by changing the environment. That's really his point. It's not that under the same condition (the exact same wort) multiple strains all taste the same. His analysis is directed at professional brewers, that may gain advantage from using a single strain in the brewery to produce multiple different beers with different yeast flavor profiles by adjusting the process rather than the strain.
I read that article few days ago and it was surprise to me too.. but then, it is C. Bamforth who likes to examine conventional facts.. this is why I love to read his articles.
I understand it as there is less difference in the similar strains than it can be achieved through different fermentation conditions. Off course, there are strains that gives unique taste that cant be achieved by other strains, but most similar strains probably gives similar results in same conditions (at least what could most people notice). But if we change the conditions it would produce huger differences between same similar strains.
Also, I remember that C. White divides all strains in 5 groups: clean, fruity, hybrid, phenolic and estery so it could also fit in Charlie"s theory since there is too much strains and some of them gives pretty similar results.
It seems that his point is that the yeast doesn't have as big a contribution to flavor as we sometimes think. I have, a couple of times, split batches into two carboys, and pitched a different yeast in each carboy. The difference between them, when tasted side by side, was barely noticeable.
And you can take strains that, if pitched into identical wort and fermented under the same conditions would produce different results, but under different wort and/or different fermentation could produce similar results.
I figure that plus Chris White's point (which is how I've understood it too), roughly makes sense with what Charlie is saying.
Thanks!
I remember seeing somewhere that sierra nevada used chico in everyone of their beers even in the lager. But then looking at their site it says lager yeast for the lager. I guess I can see the coaxing a yeast into doing what you want argument. After using WLP002 for the zombie dust clone I think that might be my go to yeast for american styles. Fermented low it is very clean and drops out very quickly.
hercher said:I had the opportunity to talk to one of the Yuengling brewers (it was actually one of the family), and she surprised me by saying that they used the same yeast in all their beers.
I did a yeast trial where I broke up a five gallon batch of EdWort's haus pale ale between five one gallon jugs with different yeasts. Three varieties (Bells, dark horse, founders) all tasted almost identical. Pacman got contaminated and was no good, and English ale yeast had a fruitiness that made it the best of the field.