The Foxfire books, some of you are familiar with them. It's almost dandelion season down in Georgia, and I am going to make some dandelion wine for the first time and I want to use the recipe from the Foxfire book vol II, very old-timey.
It calls for "yeast cake" and I'm not sure what this means. In 1966 Appalachian terms, what is a "yeast cake"?
I was just going to pitch with Fleishmann's to keep it kitchy and quaint, but did some calculations and if fermented fully, it would be 20% or more alcohol. Obviously, it would finish very sweet, especially with a basic yeast. It would also probably taste very funky from the yeast being stressed before finally dying, if it even fermented at all.
If by "yeast cake" they mean a large amount of sediment from a previous batch of wine, is it possible that the huge amount of yeast would be able to eat up enough sugar, quickly enough, to bring the gravity down to a moderate level for the majority of the fermentation time, with a minimal of "off" flavors and sulfur compounds, given the graduated alcohol content through that process?
Given a typical lag phase and growth phase, with plenty aeration for the first couple of days, can the gross amount of yeast introduced actually have a profound enough effect to overcome what seems to be a Dead End for a typical brew/wine?
I know, there's a lot of questions embedded within questions here, but any insight to educate me on yeast in general will help me very much. Hopefully some of you gurus can enlighten me.
Also, FWIW, I will be using water from a secret hidden mountain spring from the mountainside of the same microrange as the dandelions are picked from..
It calls for "yeast cake" and I'm not sure what this means. In 1966 Appalachian terms, what is a "yeast cake"?
I was just going to pitch with Fleishmann's to keep it kitchy and quaint, but did some calculations and if fermented fully, it would be 20% or more alcohol. Obviously, it would finish very sweet, especially with a basic yeast. It would also probably taste very funky from the yeast being stressed before finally dying, if it even fermented at all.
If by "yeast cake" they mean a large amount of sediment from a previous batch of wine, is it possible that the huge amount of yeast would be able to eat up enough sugar, quickly enough, to bring the gravity down to a moderate level for the majority of the fermentation time, with a minimal of "off" flavors and sulfur compounds, given the graduated alcohol content through that process?
Given a typical lag phase and growth phase, with plenty aeration for the first couple of days, can the gross amount of yeast introduced actually have a profound enough effect to overcome what seems to be a Dead End for a typical brew/wine?
I know, there's a lot of questions embedded within questions here, but any insight to educate me on yeast in general will help me very much. Hopefully some of you gurus can enlighten me.
Also, FWIW, I will be using water from a secret hidden mountain spring from the mountainside of the same microrange as the dandelions are picked from..