mrodrigues9
Active Member
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2016
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Anyone ever use Windsor dry yeast on a NE IPA?
no, but this might be available soon.....
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posted by Verdant on their twatter page
Or just buy S-04 from Fermentis for half the price... :rockin:
I haven't yet, but my current plan is to pitch one pack of Windsor and one pack of S-04. I'll probably just rehydrate them together. Thinking of fermenting at 63 degrees F.
I've modified my thinking on this. Revised plan is to pitch 1/3 Fermentis S-O4, 1/3 Danstar Windsor, and 1/3 Danstar Munich Wheat. And to ferment at 64 degrees. Trying to introduce some POF+ genetic characteristics.
Wish I could get my hands onto some of that Danstar Lalbrew New England though...
I would use the Danstar Munich Classic, which is the W68 strain. ( there is a thread on this forum regarding it )
^Sarcasm^? I didn't get that impression...
How can the Danstar New England stir up enthusiasm when it doesn't exist yet for the public, and there is no hint of it on their website, and search engines don't even come up with hits for it? That said, I'm enthused.
Indeed. http://www.lallemandbrewing.com/product-details/lalbrew-new-england/
When it shows up at my lhbs I'll give it a try on half a 10 gallon batch and compare it to either Conan or 1318...
Cheers!
The "Vermont" yeast aka "Conan" is supposed to be the yeast Boddingtons used in the 80s which was discovered to be Nottingham when one of the original brewers was tracked down and asked. When I used it in my NE IPA I got the same peachy apricot aromas. Which brewery was using Windsor originally?
I tried to mention Nottingham over on the gene sequencing thread, and I was ignored.