I literally just bought a kilo yesterday and had em ship it to Portugal. Freight wasn't too terrible at 22 euros. Hopefully US customs won't have an issue with a package of white powder in my luggage.
So just to make sure I'm doing my math right, if I'm adding 40mg/l (40ppm?), that basically equates to 10ppm sodium and 30ppm sulfates (if I remember correctly from the podcast)?
Using 1 mg/l of SMB will add 0.24 ppm sodium to your water,
and 0.76 ppm of sulfur compounds (sulfur dioxide, sulfite, and bisulfite). The
amount of sulfate formed will depend upon how much oxygen is introduced
into your system and subsequently scavenged by the sulfites.
I literally just bought a kilo yesterday and had em ship it to Portugal. Freight wasn't too terrible at 22 euros. Hopefully US customs won't have an issue with a package of white powder in my luggage.
I started a BTB thread on the LOB site: http://www.lowoxygenbrewing.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=35
This is a paper that describes some results when working with gallotannins that popped up in that thread i found to be at least somewhat interesting (still digesting it): http://www.lowoxygenbrewing.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Officiele_tekst_voor_Brewing_Science.pdf
What brought me back to this thread after kind of writing it off when it first came out was that someone had mentioned that their NEIPAs in that thread had become significantly better. Was that you?
Are you on the low-oxygen site's forum?
2 Questions:
1: What is a recommended LoDO method of dry hopping if using corny kegs?
Obviously opening the keg is going to introduce O2 and violate the "closed" transfer system.
I'm going to assume you recommend adding the hops during active fermentation, not because of biotransformation, but so the yeast can scavenge introduced O2?
I'm sure it's been addressed here, but I've kinda hit my time/patience limit for today fishing through this thread looking for it.
2: How many of you practitioners using a corny keg system end up using a third keg? Seems to me that for the cleanest beer, I would want a primary fermneter keg, then racking to a lagering keg/bright tank, then finally to a clean serving keg. Then again, by adding the additional transfer, you risk introducing more oxygen without active yeast to counter it.
Is the solution to leave the beer in primary until it drops bright? But then 't that would adversely affect your ability to spund/naturally carbonate.
Anybody want to clear up an ideal process here? I am used to crystal clear lagers and I rarely use fining agents. I'd hate to lose that quality.
1. http://www.lowoxygenbrewing.com/uncategorized/low-oxygen-dryhopping/
2. I go right from fermenter to final serving keg. Transfer with 3-4 gravity points remaining, use a good floccing strain and you will have clear beer in a few weeks. Around 4 weeks my beers look like this.
I just use whirfloc and good brewing practices![]()
When I say two kegs, I mean using one as a primary.I don't know how you will get 2 kegs to work for you, unless you are able to vacuum and purge your final keg. If you want to get crazy cut your diptube, but fermenter to final gravity/lagering/serving keg is all thats needed.
When I say two kegs, I mean using one as a primary.
Next up, I am going to brew a Hefewiezen LODO to see if its better than last years batch which was a smash hit when it was done non-LODO.
I just wanted to point out that several folks have had pretty poor (read: sulfur-hell) results using WLP351 in low oxygen brewing. In fact, several folks have noticed big residual sulfur with this yeast in NON low oxygen batches even.
On the other hand, Wyeast 3068 has shown success for some folks with low oxygen brewing. I've used this yeast years ago (before low oxy brewing) and it was excellent for bringing those classic banana/clove characteristics.
You can find a list of yeast strains and compatibility with SMB that I'm trying to keep updated here:
http://www.lowoxygenbrewing.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=9&start=10#p401
That sucks...the LHBS only carries White Labs as their house yeast (I am in NC so White Labs has a factory here that is local in Asheville). Will have to source some Wyeast for this if this is the case..I certainly dont want any sulfur bombs in my hefe..
I'm with ya. I have a sulfurKolsch just lying in wait (on 2nd month in keg) that used Safale K-97 (another poor low oxy choice); I'm hoping the sulfur will fade away. I sampled it yesterday, and while it's better than it was in December, the first thing you smell and taste is the sulfur. Once you can get your brain beyond the sulfur, the underlying beer is quite good, but MAN is that sulfur distracting (and sulfurBurps are gross).
If you're a gambler you can certainly see for yourself with WLP351, but I thought I would put that out there before you possibly end up where others have already been. I've never used WLP351 myself so I cannot comment on this strain from direct experience; just what I've read.
I wonder if Imperial, Omega, or other yeast manufacturers are available in your area that have a suitable hefe strain?
No thanks..no gambling here. I would rather do it non-LODO with zero sulfur than get the rotten egg beer..I get hints of sulfur in my hefe with white labs regardless at the tail end of the first week/beginning of the second week of fermentation as it is but it always is gone by the time I rack it.
Having it carry to the serving keg would really suck.
Yet more things to learn about LODO..not all the glitters is gold with this method for sure.
to be clear, if not a bit nitpicky, the use of SMB is not required for low dissolved oxygen. using it is just a method that allows for this to be achieved economically. although some styles may benefit from or require oxidation, I would go ahead and say that everything else does indeed glitter from LODO, based off of the general cost of oxidation with respect to flavor. the sulphur bombs are not a result of minimizing dissolved oxygen, but using SMB to achieve this
Anybody care to collect and collate a list of "SMB friendly" and "SMB UN-friendly" yeasts?
Also, I notice on the website the comment that the LO2 collective has not found a compatible dry yeast. Really? Not even 34/70? I've always found that one to be super forgiving and adaptable.
Anybody care to collect and collate a list of "SMB friendly" and "SMB UN-friendly" yeasts?
Also, I notice on the website the comment that the LO2 collective has not found a compatible dry yeast. Really? Not even 34/70? I've always found that one to be super forgiving and adaptable.
What I can do (full volume BIAB):
Boil mash water
Use wort chiller
Add SMB
Gently stir mash
Add SMB (moved above)
Simmer wort
Chill close to pitch temp
Aerate after pitching
The bad:
Copper wort chiller (no worries; don't clean the patina; remove from wort when not in use)
Ferment in buckets (no worries; yeast keep you protected here)
No closed transfer (no worries but keep focus on minimizing O2 pickup - splashing and such)
No mash cap (no worries, use foil or plastic wrap)
No spunding valve (no worries; just rack with remaining sugars or prime in primary then rack an hour later)
I think I can address the close transfer by transferring right before FG is reached and add priming sugar to keg.
Would my efforts here be a waste? Any issues? Very interested to see even some improvement in my beers. Thanks in advance
I do not believe your efforts would be a waste, and any "issues" you have are all things that you can tighten up later on down the road if you decide this is a path worth pursuing.