To me quite the opposite. 6 months old IPA, bittering additions only, same yeast derived flavour as on day one. My guess is, what's actually fading in your case might be the hops.
Can you post a recipe for that IPA with Voss Kveik yeast?
To me quite the opposite. 6 months old IPA, bittering additions only, same yeast derived flavour as on day one. My guess is, what's actually fading in your case might be the hops.
I pitched at about 104-105 degrees
If I'm reading it correctly, Voss is almost perfectly viable at 104 degrees?Be careful with that, it's at the limits of viability even for kveik - and is enough to kill some kveiks, although at least one member of the Voss multistrain happens to be one of the tougher ones. See this chart of viability vs temp (42°C=107.6°F,40°C=104°F,37°C=98.6°F,35°C=95°F) from the recent paper on kveik "toughness", which Lars explains in layman's terms here :
View attachment 741526
If I'm reading it correctly, Voss is almost perfectly viable at 104 degrees?
Beer looks good.Brewed a wet hop beer recently
I’m digging the ease of Voss in the dried form, get a couple of batches out one packet and not chilling fully to 68 is nice.
I’m digging the ease of Voss in the dried form, get a couple of batches out one packet and not chilling fully to 68 is nice.
Yeah, I made a starter of this back last summer, not knowing how active a yeast it was. The next morning g my kitchen floor and countertop was covered in hornindal.This yeast is easy to get hold of in sweden.I pitched this earlier today in an IPA OG 1.070.I pitched at 36 Celsius and wrapped a winterjacket around the fermenter.Had to head to work after that and just got back some 9h later.It must have taken off like a rocket.Under the jacket the fermenter was hot 35-36 celsius and very active.I expect this to be fully fermented in another 24-36h.
Kveiky what a mess!The next morning g my kitchen floor and countertop was covered in hornindal.
This and I'm a bit of a flippit brewer, extract brewing, brew not so much to style but to taste, and if it's beer it's probably drinkable. Dry Voss Keivk fills that bill well as I don't need a ferm chamber or an IC, just an ice bath. A basic heating pad, blanket and a temp controller and I'm good. I've made several batches @ 1.070+ with just 1/2 a pack so that's just $2.50-$3.00 a batch. That's a pretty small part of an extract beer cost. I have used a slurry of it once, it was a bit slower starting but still chewed it up.This is a benefit that does not get as much attention as it should. This time of year I will struggle to get an ale down below 85F with my immersion chiller.
Wait, whaaaaat? Did you say orange in a stout?I add a whole packet of Voss or M12 to 4-5ga and have minimal orange. It is still there, but I mostly brew stouts and the orange works well in them.
Also, I pitch at 104 and hold at 90.
Wait, whaaaaat? Did you say orange in a stout?
That is interesting. I don't know if I want to brew one right this instant, or cringe. It's in that area though.It's minimal. Very light hint. But yes, I did. I've thought about brewing an actual orange stout with peel and/or juice. The kveik already tastes like those chocolate oranges you can get at Christmas Tree Shops (my Massachusetts is probably showing).
That is interesting. I don't know if I want to brew one right this instant, or cringe. It's in that area though.
Tootsie Roll. Chocolate, caramel, orange.
Less than 3 days since pitching, gravity is 1.007 with just a bit of bubbling now. I'll probably cold crash tomorrow.Brewed a Big Kveik Pale Ale yesterday with dry Voss. OG was 1.078, down to 1.032 24 hours later. Btw, using the SPUNDit at 30. This was a last minute brew, just winged it.
Wait, whaaaaat? Did you say orange in a stout?
Care to share any details on OG, FG, and temps?The last two holiday seasons I've done gingerbread porters with Voss. The hint of orange works well.
And yes, that's Kvack in my avatar.