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i feel stoopid, but what are you looking for? I don't recognize that.
i feel stoopid, but what are you looking for? I don't recognize that.
Typo. Should have been any. Old eyes, tiny phone, tiny keyboardi feel stoopid, but what are you looking for? I don't recognize that.
Thanks for sharing the recipe. Great looking beer!I just tapped a keg of ordinary bitter. Something along these lines is becoming my standard recipe for a bitter.
View attachment 867319
OG 1.037
FG 1.008
ABV 3.8 %
31.1 IBUs
5 lbs Golden Promise (Simpsons) 63.7%
1 lb Munich Malt (IREKS) 12.7%
1 lb White Wheat Malt 12.7%
4.0 oz Caramalt Malt - 55L (Bairds) [Vorlauf] 3.2%
1.6 oz Carafa Special I (Weyermann) [Vorlauf] 1.3%
8.0 oz Turbinado sugar [Boil] 6.4%
36.00 g East Kent Goldings [5.00 %] - Boil 60.0 min 24.2 IBUs
28.00 g East Kent Goldings [5.00 %] - Boil 10.0 min 6.8 IBUs
0.5 pkg Nottingham Yeast
0.5 pkg Windsor Yeast
14.00 g Bramling Cross [5.80 %] - dry hop
Mashed at 152F. Started fermentation at 63F and let it free rise.
I added Munich to boost the maltiness and used Turbinado instead of invert to see if I could tell the difference (I couldn't) and may not go back to using invert. I guess I've given up on being a purist.
I used a floating dip tube and it is still pretty hazy. Hopefully time in the fridge will clear it up, but my experience with this yeast combo is that it won't ever be super clear.
Why do you stick with the Windsor/Nottingham? The flavor? What other dry strains have you tried with these?I just tapped a keg of ordinary bitter. Something along these lines is becoming my standard recipe for a bitter.
View attachment 867319
OG 1.037
FG 1.008
ABV 3.8 %
31.1 IBUs
5 lbs Golden Promise (Simpsons) 63.7%
1 lb Munich Malt (IREKS) 12.7%
1 lb White Wheat Malt 12.7%
4.0 oz Caramalt Malt - 55L (Bairds) [Vorlauf] 3.2%
1.6 oz Carafa Special I (Weyermann) [Vorlauf] 1.3%
8.0 oz Turbinado sugar [Boil] 6.4%
36.00 g East Kent Goldings [5.00 %] - Boil 60.0 min 24.2 IBUs
28.00 g East Kent Goldings [5.00 %] - Boil 10.0 min 6.8 IBUs
0.5 pkg Nottingham Yeast
0.5 pkg Windsor Yeast
14.00 g Bramling Cross [5.80 %] - dry hop
Mashed at 152F. Started fermentation at 63F and let it free rise.
I added Munich to boost the maltiness and used Turbinado instead of invert to see if I could tell the difference (I couldn't) and may not go back to using invert. I guess I've given up on being a purist.
I used a floating dip tube and it is still pretty hazy. Hopefully time in the fridge will clear it up, but my experience with this yeast combo is that it won't ever be super clear.
Looks really nice, I'd juice up the flavour hops a bit but I personally like fairly hoppy bitters. That's quite a lot of wheat, if you were to dial it down a bit you might get better clarity quicker.I just tapped a keg of ordinary bitter. Something along these lines is becoming my standard recipe for a bitter.
View attachment 867319
OG 1.037
FG 1.008
ABV 3.8 %
31.1 IBUs
5 lbs Golden Promise (Simpsons) 63.7%
1 lb Munich Malt (IREKS) 12.7%
1 lb White Wheat Malt 12.7%
4.0 oz Caramalt Malt - 55L (Bairds) [Vorlauf] 3.2%
1.6 oz Carafa Special I (Weyermann) [Vorlauf] 1.3%
8.0 oz Turbinado sugar [Boil] 6.4%
36.00 g East Kent Goldings [5.00 %] - Boil 60.0 min 24.2 IBUs
28.00 g East Kent Goldings [5.00 %] - Boil 10.0 min 6.8 IBUs
0.5 pkg Nottingham Yeast
0.5 pkg Windsor Yeast
14.00 g Bramling Cross [5.80 %] - dry hop
Mashed at 152F. Started fermentation at 63F and let it free rise.
I added Munich to boost the maltiness and used Turbinado instead of invert to see if I could tell the difference (I couldn't) and may not go back to using invert. I guess I've given up on being a purist.
I used a floating dip tube and it is still pretty hazy. Hopefully time in the fridge will clear it up, but my experience with this yeast combo is that it won't ever be super clear.
Tate & Lyle Golden Syrup (the most common over here) contains 85% carbohydrates of which 100% are sugar.@InspectorJon The internet says it contains 31% Carbohydrates 29 of which are sugars, so I guess it is heavily diluted. Since it doesn't say anything about being inverted, it is probably quite far from Lyle's but you could always invert it yourself.
Same for me.Why do you stick with the Windsor/Nottingham? The flavor? What other dry strains have you tried with these?
I'm just curious. I spent all of the hot parts of last year looking for a workable dry yeast for smallish English ales. I had mixed feelings about the Co-pitch because of the time required to get any kind of clarity. Without checking my notes, it took an extra week and a half (a long time for one of these brews), and then never got *really* clear. I did like the flavor contribution of the yeast, although it didn't knock my socks off.
But I'm pretty focused on clarity.
I'm not a fan of S04. I like Verdant for hoppier bitters. I'm not super worried about perfect clarity and I like the flavor and predictability of the fermentation of this combination. Funny thing is, I haven't tried Windsor or Nottingham on their own. I should probably do that.Same for me.
Good old s04 ticks all the boxes for me. Either this one or notti for me if dry.
I'm pretty sure it is just S-04. It behaves and tastes the same for me. M15 has a lower attenuation, so could well be Windsor or S-33.M36 Liberty Bell from Mangrove Jacks is apparently a mix of Notti and Windsor.
6-8% torrefied wheat is pretty normal here, so I'd suggest going to half a pound if you want a round number. Bitter shouldn't be that hazy.If the wheat is part of the problem for clarity, I'd rather have a nice head than perfect clarity. 1 pound was my standard amount for best bitters. I have lots of wheat malt to use, so I'll stick with a pound for simplicity sake. I like nice round numbers!
This second generation WY1469 has way more yeast on top than first use with a Landlord clone attempt.
Hopefully I get more expressive esters too.
View attachment 864608
Might also be because the OG was 20 points higher than the Landlord clone too.
I use 8oz torrified wheat in bitters and wlp002 “fullers” yeast. Everything drops out in a couple weeks…6-8% torrefied wheat is pretty normal here, so I'd suggest going to half a pound if you want a round number. Bitter shouldn't be that hazy.
With Windsor it's worth noting that it drops pretty well, but is very "dusty" or whatever the opposite of sticky is. So you can pour a perfectly clear pint of a Windsor beer from a bottle if you're careful, and ditto from cask with a widge, but kegs tend to make a bit of a mess of it.
I have reasons to believe M36 is a mix of Windsor and Notty but haven't proved it to my complete satisfaction, ditto that it's not S-04.
Verdant is completely over the top, if you ask me. I've never had a British pint in the UK that had a yeast derived flavour intensity that was even close to what verdant delivers.I'm not a fan of S04. I like Verdant for hoppier bitters. I'm not super worried about perfect clarity and I like the flavor and predictability of the fermentation of this combination. Funny thing is, I haven't tried Windsor or Nottingham on their own. I should probably do that.
I'm really trying to push my OG lower and lower and still make a flavorful beer. It is easy to overdo the bittering and overdo the late hops. I'll be inching my way back up, but I think that will mean an ounce of dry hop rather than a half ounce for now.
If the wheat is part of the problem for clarity, I'd rather have a nice head than perfect clarity. 1 pound was my standard amount for best bitters. I have lots of wheat malt to use, so I'll stick with a pound for simplicity sake. I like nice round numbers!
It has only been in the fridge for 3 or 4 days. I'll report back in a week or two, if there is any left by then! Sharing with my homebrew club tonight.
Windsor is horrible stuff. I won't have it in the house.The one time I used Windsor it took weeks to clear and decided never again. Plenty of other options around for me.
And therein lies the rub.I find Verdant is the only one that can compete with the liquid yeast strains. Those are usually much more fruit-forward. If Verdant would precipitate faster, it would be my go-to dry yeast for British beers.
Agreed with the balance thing. I'm fascinated by the way different yeasts work differently for different people. VIPA works amazingly for me, but I've only ever used it with bottled beers (just got some kegs and getting used to them). On the other hand I went through a phase of using Nottingham and MJ-M42, which is Nottingham repacked and It's the closest I've come to to giving up! Two out of three brews stunk of open sewers. Sometimes the yeast cleaned itself up, but others were still tainted after a year in the bottle. I cleaned, sterilized, dismantled and bleached, exposed the whole kit to massive gamma radiation etc etc and nothing worked. Then I got a stinker and decided to put some nutrient in the beer, which reduced the problem dramatically. I've never been able to bring myself to use Nottingham or its homologues since. No other yeast has behaved like this, but I had about 6 or 8 bad ones with Nottingham.English bitters are about balance, in my humble opinion. The intensity of verdant makes it almost impossible to integrate it in a balanced way into the beer. I've tried it at lower and at warmer temps, didn't make much of a difference for me. Ten percent verdant or maybe twenty and the rest Nottingham works kind of. But I got a bit sensitive and don't like the specific flavour any more in a bitter.
I really liked that yeast for TT landlord type bitters. The esters played well with UK hops i thinkI've just brewed / finishing brewing a dark mild using White labs Burton ale yeast WLP 023,
consequently got a nice fresh load of yeast in the fermentasaurus collection bottle and wondering re ideas for a brew using that.
Open to suggestions, not a barley wine as I use WLP099 for that and brew one in August each year.
Well... A bitter of course!I've just brewed / finishing brewing a dark mild using White labs Burton ale yeast WLP 023,
consequently got a nice fresh load of yeast in the fermentasaurus collection bottle and wondering re ideas for a brew using that.
Open to suggestions, not a barley wine as I use WLP099 for that and brew one in August each year.
I've just brewed / finishing brewing a dark mild using White labs Burton ale yeast WLP 023,
consequently got a nice fresh load of yeast in the fermentasaurus collection bottle and wondering re ideas for a brew using that.
Open to suggestions, not a barley wine as I use WLP099 for that and brew one in August each year.