Brewing this tomorrow.....and....well....turns out I have 6lbs of Vienna and 4lbs of Pilsner... The beer gods act in mysterious ways...who am I to argue? I'll call on saint Yooper to bless this abomination .. 
I have only used 05, but any yeast that does not put forth much or any yeast character will work. You could go the lager route but the beauty of this recipe is that it yields a lager like beer without all the work and equipment. Just stick with something clean.
Random question... See above pic. Why is my fizzy yellow beer not yellow this time? I stuck to the recipe and it taste about the same. I did overshoot my volumes and just boil it down for a couple hours. Will that darken a beer? It's an idle curiosity because the only thing that really matters is that I have an easy drinking beer on tap.
I just tried the first sample of this beer. Wow. Came out exactly as hoped - great golden colour - I would describe it as a better-tasting BMC with no nasty hop bitterness or aftertaste and a nice clean background maltiness. Can't wait to brew a full-sized batch and serve this to the mates. Only minor complaint is that it had no head whatsoever, could be that it's still fresh or maybe that's just what happens with these dry beers.
I modded the recipe a bit, due to what I had on hand. Subbed in 10% Munich since I ran out of Vienna. Gave it a bit more maltiness and a darker colour I think. Also used Motueka and Liberty for hops since that's what I had. Mine finished at 1.007 and grain to glass in 17 days (bottle conditioning) which is not bad for a 5.4% ABV beer.
Wouldn't change a thing next time. Thanks Enderwig / Yooper![]()
Wow, most all my beers typically need bottle conditioning for at least 2 weeks, sometimes 3, before fully carbonated. How long did you ferment before bottling?
According to my notes it hit FG on day 7, crash cooled on day 9, bottled on day 12, first taste on day 17. I would serve this to guests as is, the carbonation is good enough, but no doubt it will be better with 1-2 weeks more to fully carb (and maybe develop some head).
I find some beers carb real fast and others take forever. Where you store them makes a big difference in my experience, as does the time of the year.
It's funny that you mentioned 34/70 and Biermuncher's centennial blonde. Just last weekend I brewed BMs blonde and considered doing 34/70 but ended up using a kolsch yeast. I took a gravity (tasting) sample yesterday and couldn't be happier with how it turned out with the kolsch yeast. 34/70 is pretty neutral so I don't think you could really go wrong with that choice.
The first time I made this I thought "This would be awesome as a lager." So here it is: Yooper's Fizzy Yellow Lager. Kept everything the same, just fermented it cool with 34/70.
View attachment 390597
Yooper's Fizzy Yellow Lager. Kept everything the same, just fermented it cool with 34/70.
View attachment 390597
Seems like people are getting a pretty wide range of colors (even allowing for different lighting and cameras) and heads; see the last 2 pictures for example. Presumably that's to do with the fraction of Vienna used.
I used 100% Vienna and a Kolsch yeast and got a darker, near-headless beer (like JonM's) with hints of black cherry to it.