Or you could warm ferment with 34/70 which is a lager yeast but thrives at ale yeast fermentation temps.
No.Is there a strand of Kviek that might make a good Octoberfest? I’m in a small apartment and have no temp control
Or lager equipment.
Have you tried the Lutra?
Thanks for the response. Just kegged my Lutra pseudo-Oktoberfest yesterday, and From the sample I took, it looks Promising. I did ferment it at the very bottom of the range (@68F).Most Kveik yeasts attenuate to much for something like a Marzën/Oktoberfest. Of the Kveiks I’m familiar with and are fairly available in the U.S.A, Lutra would be my first choice and ferment in the lower end of the range.
No ale yeast can even come close to a true clean lager profile. Of all the lager yeasts a Kveik yeast is probably the worst possible choice.Have you tried the Lutra?
No ale yeast can even come close to a true clean lager profile.
Have you used all the kveik to make pseudo lagers? There are stains that ferment cleanly without perceptible esters.
I prefer actual lagers to pseudo ones. Why settle for less if you can have the real thing?Have you used all the kveik to make pseudo lagers? There are stains that ferment cleanly without a lot of esters.
The question you answered was not asking for your preference. But rather, is it possible to brew an Oktoberfest with kveik that is close to a traditional one. So unless you have experience experimenting with the yeast in question, or you’ve done a blind taste test and can identify the ale yeast brewed fest bier with accuracy then your quick “no“ is your opinion based on what you think you know.I prefer actual lagers to pseudo ones. Why settle for less if you can have the real thing?![]()
WLP800 is not an ale yeast. Those genetic studies are all over the place as far as identification goes.
Because some people don’t have the proper Equipment to be able to lager and still want to create a reasonable facsimile of a popular seasonal beer style?I prefer actual lagers to pseudo ones. Why settle for less if you can have the real thing?![]()
Because some people don’t have the proper Equipment to be able to lager and still want to create a reasonable facsimile of a popular seasonal beer style?
I think Voss would work. However, the last few brews I've done with it have all taken a *long* time to bottle condition. Perhaps because it drops so clear when it's done there's not much yeast left, and then the bottles are stored cooler than it likes (70-ish) But they do carbonate eventually. My last one was a cream ale and it's nice and neutral. And the yeast sticks to the bottle so you can get a clean pour.
I've never heard of Lutra before. Will look it up.
I was talking specifically about myself and I do have the proper equipment to lager.Because some people don’t have the proper Equipment to be able to lager and still want to create a reasonable facsimile of a popular seasonal beer style?
According to the same study that claims it's cerevisiae it also can ferment melibiose. It would be the first known cerevisiae strain that can do that and I don't see any publication supporting this claim. Those so called "identifications" have already been shuffled around so many times that they have lost plenty of credibility. When there are such huge discrepancies between the genetic data and its phenotypic expression the results are really too questionable to be taken at face value.Can you point to a genetic study that says it's pastorianus?
According to the same study that claims it's cerevisiae it also can ferment melibiose. It would be the first known cerevisiae strain that can do that and I don't see any publication supporting this claim. Those so called "identifications" have already been shuffled around so many times that they have lost plenty of credibility. When there are such huge discrepancies between the genetic data and its phenotypic expression the results are really too questionable to be taken at face value.
Seems needlessly nit picky to me, but to be fair, I’ve been referring to mine as an Oktoberfest-ish Ale.I was talking specifically about myself and I do have the proper equipment to lager.
If you don't have it then it's fine, it's nothing to be ashamed of. But why pretend you can brew something simililar that is in reality anything but? Does calling it what it is, i.e. a Kveik ale, somehow detract from the experience?