madscientist451
Well-Known Member
Is there any data that indicates that diastaticus is anything new? Or has it been around for a long time? Put me in the camp that says this is much ado about nothing; (unless proven otherwise).
https://www.reddit.com/r/TheBrewery...lks_any_experience_testing_for_s_diastaticus/
If you allowed the Diastaticus to ferment out, then you wouldn't have had a problem. The problem would be if the Diastaticus had been inadvertently introduced in small quantities.
Have you also used that gear on lots of other "clean" batches?
Holy $hit. All I said was their website does not carry the STA1 warning on 3711 but it does on other strains. I also said that 3711 is NOT a White Labs yeast, it is Wyeast Laboratories product. 3711 and Wyeast has absolutely nothing to do with the mentioned law suit with the brewery. Wrong company and wrong strain. Just because a strain is a high attenuator does not mean STA1 exists. But if it makes you feel better, there are a ton of stories and articles claiming 3711 and other strains being diastaticus scary.
If you are that damn paranoid about 3711 or any other strain, don't use them! Brew everything with WLP001 or sourdough bakers yeast if you like. Stay away from Brett's, Lacto's and Pedio's too. They chew for a long time and poor hygiene with them will bite you in the a$$.
@bollinger: I am a very fortunate individual who enjoys access to some great equipment. When school is over I will miss the lab but I try to get the most from the opportunity.
Frankly, I would be shocked if White Labs doesn't have sufficient quality analysis to catch the contamination. You can get results from diastaticus tests in about 90 minutes. My only familiarity with the brewing world in Europe is Bavaria and they take diastaticus very seriously and have for a long time.
@bollinger: I am a very fortunate individual who enjoys access to some great equipment. When school is over I will miss the lab but I try to get the most from the opportunity.
Frankly, I would be shocked if White Labs doesn't have sufficient quality analysis to catch the contamination. You can get results from diastaticus tests in about 90 minutes. My only familiarity with the brewing world in Europe is Bavaria and they take diastaticus very seriously and have for a long time. Many breweries contract with the university systems in their areas and send samples from every batch to get results before shipping.
This is kind of on both of them actually and I'm sure that's a part of White Labs' argument. Left Hand is a formidable enough brewery to run its own internal QA which should catch contamination at any part of the process. Those beers should never have left the yeast pack let alone brite or cold room without lab approval. It's one thing to be a small brewery with limited means beyond a microscope. But when you are producing on that scale you need to be more responsible, divert dividends from owners a bit and invest in a damn lab or contract one.
Edit:
I don't mean to change the subject, the point is diastaticus becomes increasingly problematic for commercial brewing and that is compounded by beers that potentially spend a lot of time in warm storage before consumption.
Now the question is, if you were to brew a high fg porter and then bottle that using the same equipment would those bottles remain shelf stable at room temps for a prolonged time. Kudos on 1.001 though...
Now the question is, if you were to brew a high fg porter and then bottle that using the same equipment would those bottles remain shelf stable at room temps for a prolonged time. Kudos on 1.001 though...
Yes it's called 'oxyclean', 'brush', 'starsan'. Glass and SS are not getting infected and plastic will be fine with good sanitation.
I agree, 3711 is scrumtrilescent, but what's 566?My 3711/566 blend of earth destroying saison contaminants went into the keg at 1.001 FG from a 1.058 OG, cleared, and carbonated. Sampled it tonight... As always, absolutely scrumpulously wonderfully yummy. If that's what disaster and evil tastes like, bring on the Armageddon![]()
Is diastaticus susceptible to the antibiotic properties of hops like lacto?I agree, 3711 is scrumtrilescent, but what's 566?
BTW, if Diastaticus is a wild strain commonly found in nature, why aren't whole cone hops a vector for infection via dry-hopping? I know this doesn't happen in practice, but why are hops not covered with wild yeasts like just about all other vegetation? Is it the kilning? Is the handling post-kilning so well isolated from the raw hop processing areas that reintroduction of spores is prevented? Seems like a hop farm would be permeated by whatever wild spores raw hops contain.
I agree, 3711 is scrumtrilescent, but what's 566?
Thanks!566 is another one of those masochistic earth ending bacteria's from Russia or North Korea that will contaminate every brew within 500 miles, It even has the warning on it
Blending it with 3711 makes for some awesome flavors. You can also culture Dupont dregs and grow them up to use alone or mixed with 3711. I've been washing and saving both blends for quite a while. I'm sure I've contaminated most of the west coast by now.
https://www.whitelabs.com/yeast-bank/wlp566-belgian-saison-ii-yeast
In the immortal words of Delbert McClinton, You're the same kind of crazy as me!Thanks!
Edit: Reading that warning about Diastaticus made my nipples go pointy! I love monster yeasts!
Reading that warning about Diastaticus made my nipples go pointy! I love monster yeasts!
I'll look for the mushroom cloud to the west...I kegged half and bottled half, so I figure within a week, my garage and fridge should be destroyed by the pending explosions. I'm guessing by now its down to 0.915 or so![]()
Keep drinking it!Still has not brought on the zombiepocalypse
WLP590 French Saison & WLP644
If my beer brought on the zombiepocalypse I would be soooooo happy[emoji48]Keep drinking it!