NeverDie
Well-Known Member
Yes, the results are in, and you were right all along.From what I’ve read... they work fast and taste like crap. Try and let me know.
Cheers
Yes, the results are in, and you were right all along.From what I’ve read... they work fast and taste like crap. Try and let me know.
Cheers
Yes, the results are in, and you were right all along.
Well, the re-pitch worked, but a couple things:
1. Using just a regular yeast nutrient, the turbo yeast seems to have gone non-turbo. I mean, it is moving along, but not at the rate it was before.
2. It still produces a kind of paint-thinner like odor.
I did try tasting some of what had already previously fermented, and it doesn't taste as bad as it smells, but belching paint thinner vapors kinda takes the fun out of it. I think I'm going to mark this experiment as a FAIL and assume other distiller yeasts are similar.
I do look forward to trying the kveik yeasts though.
Results: the repitched turbo yeast took a 25 BRIX boosted apple juice to an 8 BRIX cider in 45 hours. That's around 10% alcohol if I'm doing the math right. So, even repitched, it's considerably faster than my Premier Cuvee, which took about 5 days to do the same. Both at room temperature (around 70F). The 25 BRIX was arrived at by mixing Member's Mark apple juice (from Sam's club) with two cans of frozen apple juice concentrate. No sugar, per se, was added.
No paint thinner odors or bad tastes this time around with the re-pitched "turbo" yeast and a normal yeast nutrient. Not sure if the paint thinner artifacts, which I commented on in an earlier batch above, were a result of the nutrient that came mixed with the turbo yeast in the original package or the spices in the "spiced" apple juice that I started with previously, or perhaps a combination of both.
I'm going to let it ferment to completion and see what happens.
Aha! The turbo yeast I bought wasn't labeled "Urea Free", so I guess by implication it probably had urea in it. Maybe that's at least partly why the original formulation tasted so weird, versus the re-pitched version which tastes relatively normal.yeah it will become a 'normal' yeast, but will still be able to ferment to high ABV....and be a bit faster, i think, been a while since i used the stuff myself, haven't done much besides beer at 8% these days...
I forgot about this thread honestly, but i believe i mentioned something about them offering a UREA free turbo now....Wasn't available to me when i was using this stuff, but something to try out...
(and don't take the serious people too seriously, they just don't know how to have fun!)
Aha! The turbo yeast I bought wasn't labeled "Urea Free", so I guess by implication it probably had urea in it. Maybe that's at least partly why the original formulation tasted so weird, versus the re-pitched version which tastes relatively normal.
Thanks for the info!
like i said i've never tried the urea free version because it's new...But i'm guessing being that it's a thing now, it could be the 'bad flavor' that normal turbo has...
give it a try next experiment and let me know!![]()
I'm a bit concerned now that maybe these formulations are meant purely for distilling and maybe aren't even safe to drink if they aren't removed by distillation. Drinking stuff with mystery ingredients intended for a different purpose seems a bit like drinking fracking water...
https://brewhaus.com/blog/what-is-urea-and-does-it-belong-in-my-turbo-yeast/
With this new information, I think it's just not for me. I'll continue to play with the re-pitched yeast a while longer though.
they still taste bad even after refluxing and pulling 92%....didn't kill me! Hmmm, there seems to be a link in my quote that's not in your post, have to read it....
edit: Read it, lol..you know there's a warning on my oxygen tank that california knows it causes cancer! and i don't plan on stopping breathing!
I would agree about the California warnings becoming so extreme that they're practically useless. I mean, California labels children's play sand as a possible carcinogen. That makes a mockery of the real threats by throwing them all into one basket.
Anyhow, I try to ask myself whether the upside justifies the risks, and, speaking only for myself, I just can't say yes in this particular instance. I mean, there just isn't a whole lot of upside that I can see to using the manufacturer's mystery formulation, provided that you have the yeast already captured.
And turbo 'yeast' are better then what they call distiller's in my experience....
Oh, that's something I didn't know. I had thought they were likely the same sort of beast. Well, I'm always pleased when I can learn new things!
yeah the distiller's stuff they always claim can go to 20+%, but never actually do, but i always could get an easy ferment to 16+% with washed turbo...
If you want to play with a distilling yeast for brewing, give WLP050 Tennessee a go - it's a POF- yeast (unusually for distilling) with an interesting aroma profile, quite floral.
Hothead is generally regarded as about the mildest of the kveiks, try Hornindal...
Conclusion: The repitched turbo yeast did its job and converted a 25 BRIX apple juice + FAJC soution into a 3 BRIX solution in just 3 days. In that sense, I'm impressed. However, now that I've experienced the Hothead Kveik yeast, which smells great, the relatively sour notes of the turbo yeast just don't hold any appeal for me. Therefore, that's the end of my turbo yeast experiments. My curiosity with it has been satisfied.
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and now i have to do some digging and find out what the hell this kveik stuff people are all raving about is!![]()
What do you mean by "mildest"? In what sense? Also, why Hornindal specifically?
At least on paper, mead seems like it practically *is* a sugar wash--just using honey instead of table sugar. So, I might try making some of that.
Presently doing simple cysers for the purpose of comparing different yeasts. I take back what I said in the passage that you quoted: it's far more aromatic and flavorful than a simple sugar wash.Is it an autumnal mead?
I was going to recommend Hothead if you want neutral. I like Hornindal a lot for hoppy beers, but not dark beers (I get a caramel kind of note I don’t like).