dedhedjed said:It'll be interesting to see how the yeast behaves in a full fermentation. Yeast that managed to make it into a bottle I would expect to have very low flocculation characteristics, since we cold crash the fermentors and centrifuge the beer to remove yeast during transfer to the bright tanks where it is force carbonated and later packaged from. I'm impressed you managed to culture a viable colony of yeast at all post centrifuge... And I bet our lab guys will be interested as well. I'll pass this on to them for sure. Keep us posted... and keep drinking SweetWater!
Nicely done!
I'm one of the brewers at SweetWater... We use Wyeast 1968 in IPA.
kpr121 said:Good luck! I always pick up a 12 pack or two of 420 and/or IPA when we go on vacation in October (HHI), but I've honestly never realized the yeast in the bottles. Im very interested in how this turns out, because I will definitely try this if it works for you! That IPA is awesome. You planning a clone if the yeast takes off? Got a recipe?
We will find out in a couple weeks. Brewed a 1.054 brown Saturday, did "no chill" and pitched the yeast Sunday after throwing it all into a 1.5 Liter starter they went for 12 hours, tossed in the whole starter.dedhedjed said:It'll be interesting to see how the yeast behaves in a full fermentation.
I just went to HHI and Charleston last week. Nice place. Played golf at the Seapines Resort Ocean Course. Woulda liked to play the Kiahwah Island Ocean Couse lol
Nicely done!
I'm one of the brewers at SweetWater... We use Wyeast 1968 in IPA.
Thank you. It has been fun. I hope to freeze some of the yeast. I will be taking a gravity reading tonight. I am hoping to bottle this weekend....I know I should leave it longer but this is the only time I have for a while and the pipeline is empty.Cracking great job there Kingfish! Looks like you did exactly what you set out to do and more to boot!