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Five distinct yeasts

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Lipanook

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Jan 14, 2011
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Location
Southampton
I recently brewed a very nice beer that I am going to use as the base recipe for some experimentation.

The basic recipe I used was this:
Wilkinson's Pilsner kit
Muntons medium spray malt - 500 g
Brewing sugar - 500 g
Cascade hops (1 oz, dry hopped 3 days before bottling)
Brew Lab 5700 Belgium lager yeast

I ended up with something between a lager and a summer ale.
What I am hoping to do next is experiment with yeasts. The plan is to make a 5 gallon batch and split it into 5 demijohns before pitching each demijohn with a different yeast.

I want to try to have to widest range of flavours possible. Does anyone have any suggestions for the different yeasts that would be worth trying?
 
I've heard the Saison 3711 gives a nice black pepper flavor. I might try that and a lambic strain for a nice wide variety.
 
If you have separate equipment and are willing to wait over a year you can do a lambic. It would definitely be different than everything else. 3711 is a good choice.

I guess the trick is finding yeasts that all work in the same temperature range? Can you put them at different temps?

I recommend you go with different regions of the world. Clean American yeast, fruity British, hefe, belgian, and then something wild.
 
I don't have the capability of brewing at different temperatures at the moment, but that is something I'm going to work towards now that I've got some dedicated space for brewing.
I like the idea of doing a lambic because I do love them, but I think I'll leave that for another project.
I'm going to use 5700 like before as a base for comparisons. I'll probably also use the yeast that comes in the kit as it is an experiment. Having read about 3711, I'll give that a go. I'll use something like US-05 as I hear that doesn't add much of its own flavour.
Any recommendations on a particular hefe or British ale yeast?
 
I have found that T-58 seems to be a very polarizing contender. From what I've seen (and the few times brewed) people either love it or can't stand it. For experimenting I think it's a good choice.
 
T-58 will probably get more black pepper phenols for you than 3711, and some banana as well.

For an English strain, try Ringwood.
 

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