Thanks for the feedback! I will go with Crisp 19 Maris Otter as it is one of the only ones I can locate. The three closest LBS have gone under so it is either a three + hour drive or on line.
BTW I kegged the below beer on Sunday and it's already tasting good.
It was based on post #4 from this thread.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/threads/anyone-brewed-an-ipa-with-ekg.140192/
I just changed EKG with Pilgrim.
The only strange thing is that is ended up around 1.005 instead of 1.010.
It wasn't hop creep because it was already at this SG before dry hopping.
I also mashed for 60 mins at 66oC and my thermometer is reading correctly.
It was also a new pack of yeast so first generation and should not have mutated unless that happend when stepping up the starter.
It also tastes fine and is not as thin as I was expecting so all goodbut maybe some slight contamination got in there to drive up the attenuation.
I want to do a Bass Ale clone next using the same yeast so I hope it behaves differently, but just in case I might mash around 68 or 69oC to hopefully lower the attenuation a bit.
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I have had two of my most recent batches, where my FG was lower than the software predicted. In one instance I was using Bell’s Yeast from Imperial. That is the most aggressive yeast I have ever used. The other one I was using was White labs WLP 007. I was surprised at how low that went, at least five points farther than Beersmith predicted. The English dry yeast lived up to its name.Just started my weekend with a pint of this, dangerously drinkable at about 7.5%
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Until now I have only experienced this after repitching but this time the 1275 was a first generation pitch with a 1 litre starter.I have had two of my most recent batches, where my FG was lower than the software predicted. In one instance I was using Bell’s Yeast from Imperial. That is the most aggressive yeast I have ever used. The other one I was using was White labs WLP 007. I was surprised at how low that went, at least five points farther than Beersmith predicted. The English dry yeast lived up to its name.
I think EVG is GermanI got 90% EVG on the second usage of a WLP007 once.
Where about in the German interwebs?Yeah, you're right. Sorry for getting used to speaking to some German folks. Some are picking up on how to brew British ales. Very confusing that![]()
Most people write to me directly via Facebook, but there is also a Discord channel where British beers are sometimes mentioned https://discord.gg/ZjCudkDaWhere about in the German interwebs?
Half the terminology in brewing is, isn't it? Trub, Kraeusen, lautering, ...I think EVG is German![]()
Not at all. Why, when there are perfectly good English words? Ive never heard of EVG in 50+ years of brewing and beer reading. Using "foreign" words just to be cool or trendy is a pain in the neck. The French language is disappearing because the French, for some reason, want to replace everything with an English equivalent- no matter how inaccurately.Half the terminology in brewing is, isn't it? Trub, Kraeusen, lautering, ...
Time to just get on with it and embrace the full Germanization. Fick ja!
I agree, too. I had forgotten.The rocky yeast head is known as Barm.
@Northern_Brewer I think agrees.
If in retrospect wouldn't it be " pitched "I agree, too. I had forgotten.
In retrospect, isn't barm what we pitch, ie yeast in general.
Sorry, Dunc, I dont get it. You've lost me.The rocky yeast head is known as Barm.
@Northern_Brewer I think agrees.
If in retrospect wouldn't it be " pitched "
Looking forward to hearing your opinion regarding the bitter!@HighlandTap Same for me, I also recently used it for the first time. Did a parti-gyle with a NEIPA and an Ordinary Bitter. It fermented quick and dropped very clear, lovely behaviour. I had 82% attenuation in both beers.
I only tasted the NEIPA so far but it gave a very pleasing fruity complexity and reduced any harsh components from dry-hopping to none. It is now recommended by White Labs for very hoppy beers because of its capability to release thiols.
Barm is a bread roll, or at least a barm cake is.Balm is a
Bread roll
Or it’s Myrrh
They're not true Goldings, although they do have some Goldings heritage - they were named that way because Goldings came to be used as a generic identifier of quality in the same way that a lot of sparkling wine in the New World came to be called "champagne", even Fuggle was originally sold as Fuggle's Golding and Styrian Golding is a more recent example.If anyone has used Whitbread Goldings, how different from East Kent are they?
Too right - there's proper English words for pretty much every brewing term, the problem is that the US didn't just put Germans in charge of their national cuisine (I mean - why?) but their brewing as well, hence oddities like Plato rather than gravity. There's also odd bits of borrowing from the Belgians as well, using foeder instead of vat and things like that.The rocky yeast head is known as Barm.
@Northern_Brewer I think agrees.
Indeed, levure chimique always makes me giggle every time I use it.Barm cakes were traditionally made with that yeast, as opposed to soda bread or unleavened bread. (as an aside, one of my favourite Frenchisms is baking powder being "levure chimique" = "chemical yeast" ).
What is this cask heartland of which you speak?First I've heard of it, and I've been drinking cask since the 70s. I don't get around the country so much now but I do get into Lancashire and Yorkshire where cask still seems to be going strong.