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Threw these in a starter last night and will be an Anna-ish beer on Sunday!
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Threw these in a starter last night and will be an Anna-ish beer on Sunday!
![]()
Threw these in a starter last night and will be an Anna-ish beer on Sunday!
IllbeBOCK and I brewed a split batch of Saison a couple weekends ago. 1/2 clean and dry hopped. The other half got a mixed fermentation starter with Anna dregs. Both smell amazing
Recipe if you don't mind!
10 gal Recipe expected OG 1.06 FG 1.01 - 1.015 ABV is 6ish
16 # Pilsner malt
4 # American wheat
1 # flaked oat
1 # honey malt
1 # corn sugar (which we forgot to add, but we did add 1 lb of light DME to boost the gravity a bit since we are working out the kinks of our new mash tun)
Mashed @ 148 for 90 min
90 min boil
2 oz Saaz @t 90 (AA @ 3-5 %)
2 oz Saaz @ 45
Dextrose @ 10 (which we forgot to add)
2 oz Citra @ 5 min (AA 11- 15 %)
5 gal got C2C Omega blend and direct pitch of dregs from a bottle of HF Anna after aerating.
5 gal got a "clean" farmhouse yeast (not sure what it was exactly, Vogt52 was the one who bought it. I got the C2C)
Anyone want to compare Weiner sizes? I can send you a few bottles of mine and you can figure out if you want to send yours 3-12 months from now.
I fermented C2C at 68 degrees
Color difference is very interesting. Not sure what the cause is really. Both were same exact color on day one. Any idea what can cause wort to darken? I'm still a bit of a fermentation noob.
What did you guys ferment C2C at?
What did you guys ferment C2C at?
Anyone want to compare Weiner sizes? I can send you a few bottles of mine and you can figure out if you want to send yours 3-12 months from now.
I fermented C2C at 68 degrees
We're in
wine/champagne yeast only affect sacc strains. no affect on brett strainsSo I would think by using HF dregs post 2013 you're not really getting much from them.
In primary/secondary/bottling/all?slightly off-topic but if you never tried, wine yeast and brett work marvelously together!
primary of course. outside of something like fruiting there is practically no reason to secondaryIn primary/secondary/bottling/all?
Other scenario would be to get off spent hop matter in a beer that's being aged for an extended period. Things can get pretty damned vegetal otherwise...primary of course. outside of something like fruiting there is practically no reason to secondary
Hmm. I don't think this is a concern here (especially for this style). I've aged wild ales in primary for damn near two years. It's not like your dry hopping and then extended aging...right...?Other scenario would be to get off spent hop matter in a beer that's being aged for an extended period. Things can get pretty damned vegetal otherwise...
Right. But if you did a huge hop at flameout, a lot will be in suspension at transfer...Hmm. I don't think this is a concern here (especially for this style). I've aged wild ales in primary for damn near two years. It's not like your dry hopping and then extended aging...right...?
for 99% of my beers, I ONLY hop at flameout... no issues so far.Right. But if you did a huge hop at flameout, a lot will be in suspension at transfer...
In kettle? Yes.for 99% of my beers, I ONLY hop at flameout... no issues so far.
are you just dumping pellets in loose?
Sampling the extract saison I made pitching TYB 184 alongside WLP565 (belgian saison 1). Went from 1.063 to 1.014 in 21 days. I'm pretty bad at picking up nuances in flavor but I can say that it's slightly tart and sweet. A lot of sulfur aroma is present but it's still young, it seems to happen with all of my brett beers and goes away after 3 months or so.