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Princeton Homebrewanywhere that sells this?
i dont know how to harvest it from a can of HT and dont want to.
Princeton Homebrewanywhere that sells this?
i dont know how to harvest it from a can of HT and dont want to.
If you are in the SF Bay Area, J&M Brewing supplies (http://jmbrew.com) carries Giga Yeast Vermont IPA Yeast (http://www.gigayeast.com/vermont-ipa-yeast-gy054). Going to give it a try in a couple of weeks.AnOldUR said:
I'm starting to wonder if my harvested Conan IS actually Conan after reading the article in the newest BYO magazine. It says the Alchemist is no longer using that strain..
Is this true?
Sorry for the poor photo quality, but I shot an exert from the article.
Here it is..
I think the author may have misunderstood. Thw brewer may have meant that the strain has mutated from its original form when it belonged to Noonan. I harvested some about a month ago and it had that huge peach/orange aroma.
AFAIK ECY29 as well as the Yeast Geek strain are harvested from HT - so whether or not it's called Conan or Dave the strains will still be what is currently used in HT
I wonder if they are/have been stepping up an older generation of Conan from HT, or the "supposed" newer strain from HT.
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I recently received an East Coast Yeast ECY29 strain, aka Conan. Unfortunately USPS delayed my shipment and it was in route for 5 days instead of 2. I immediately set up a yeast starter to ensure my best chances at viability and propagating the most possible cells. The yeast container was not warm to the touch when I opened the package, but not what I would consider cool either. When I opened it to put it in the starter I was overwhelmed with sulfur, which was a bit of a shock.
So for those of you who've used this strain, is that something I should be concerned about? Is my yeast a goner at this point? Or should I not worry about that sulfur smell since this is just propagation at 70 degrees and not the same temperature I'll be fermenting at which will be 64 degrees.
Nightmare happened. My double batch of DIPA was in the fermentation chest and the fridge wasn't plugged in. Just the heat of these in an enclosed area got it up to ~83, I just noticed and it has been almost 2 full days. Beyond bummed. Should I just dump it? It was a big investment in terms of hops, but even more if I go through with the double dry hopping schedule.
Never happened to me before, and of course of my most involved beer ever!
I would recommend never dumping a batch without seeing it thru to the bottle. At least in situations regarding fermentation temps. I say bottle it, and see how it tastes. If it doesn't taste good, then you can consider dumping. Just my thoughts....
I recently received an East Coast Yeast ECY29 strain, aka Conan. Unfortunately USPS delayed my shipment and it was in route for 5 days instead of 2. I immediately set up a yeast starter to ensure my best chances at viability and propagating the most possible cells. The yeast container was not warm to the touch when I opened the package, but not what I would consider cool either. When I opened it to put it in the starter I was overwhelmed with sulfur, which was a bit of a shock.
So for those of you who've used this strain, is that something I should be concerned about? Is my yeast a goner at this point? Or should I not worry about that sulfur smell since this is just propagation at 70 degrees and not the same temperature I'll be fermenting at which will be 64 degrees.
Would you change your mind if each 5 gallon batch needed another 7oz of dry hop?I take your point though, I think I should let it ride and see what happens.
If each of your batches "need" 7oz of dry hopping to make them drinkable, then you have other problems! At that point I'm not thinking "dump!" but rather "never brew beer again"!![]()
:cross: The beastly Heady Topper Clone!
I've done 4 beers now with conan that a friend built up and gave me some of
APA (1L starter from washed yeast starter): 1.054 to 1.012 mash @153F (78% attenuation)
American Wheat (1 cup slurry from APA): 1.054 to 1.010 mash @153F (81%)
IIPA (2 cups slurry from APA): 1.085 to 1.013 mash @148F (85%)
Milk Stout (1 cup slurry from Am wheat): 1.065 to 1.02 mash @154F (80% if remove lactose)
most of fermentation was done at 58-60F ambient, which worked out to about 62-65F internal. its certainly a lil fruitier & hazier than chico. none of them have reached great clarity even after a few weeks in the keezer. the aforementioned friend recently split an IPA 3-ways (chico, conan, w34/70) and the chico one was the best, so i'm not sure how much more i'll play around with conan at the moment.
Purchased some ECY29 a couple weeks ago and make a starter, pitched into a Heady Clone Recipe which came out at 1.074. Right now it's at 1.021 and I'm hoping to take it down a few more points. Fermentation was at 63 degrees. Do I kick up the temperature to 70 or so and wait a fee more days? Or is there some other trick to get this yeast to get down closer to my target FG?
Purchased some ECY29 a couple weeks ago and make a starter, pitched into a Heady Clone Recipe which came out at 1.074. Right now it's at 1.021 and I'm hoping to take it down a few more points. Fermentation was at 63 degrees. Do I kick up the temperature to 70 or so and wait a fee more days? Or is there some other trick to get this yeast to get down closer to my target FG?