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New Yeast Company to Launch in Late October

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Just wanted to share that The Yeast Bay has a lot of their offerings up right now that they just restocked. More to come again next Friday according to their Facebook as well.



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What is yeast bay? A place I sell yeast or another yeast bank?


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It's a small yeast company that is based in CA. Offers a lot of commercially unavailable strains. They contract manufacture their yeast through White Labs, so you know the quality is there! There's a lot of info on their website. Just google them :)


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Just ordered three strains! Vermont Ale, Wallonian Farmhouse, and Saison Blend. Can't wait to try these!!
 
I'm waiting to see what Lochristi does in conjunction with wine yeast. I'm going to do one using funk town soon as well.
 
According to The Yeast Bay Facebook page, they are coming out with 4 new yeast blends in July (including their first with lactic acid bacteria) that look pretty interesting:

"We're pleased to announce that we're in the final stages of banking some new isolates with White Labs, and we'll be adding 4 new cultures to The Yeast Bay lineup in the near future:

Mélange ---- A sour ale blend that is a diverse mix of organisms, intended for use in the production sour beers in which a balance of funk and sourness is desired. This blend contains two Saccharomyces cerevisiae isolates, Saccharomyces fermentati, eight Brettanomyces isolates, Lactobacillus brevis, Lactobacillus delbreuckii and Pediococcus damnosus.

Amalgamation ---- A blend of six of our favorite Brettanomyces isolates. This will produce a bright beer that is well attenuated with pleasant fruit forward flavors and some nice funk on the nose.

Dry Belgian Ale ---- A single strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae isolated from a unique golden strong ale, and a real beast. The profile is a complex and balanced mix of fruit (apple, pear, light citrus) with some spicy and peppery notes. The apparent attenuation of this strain ranges anywhere from 95-100%. For a yeast that's as dry as it is, it creates beers with a surprising amount of balance even without the use of specialty grains or adjuncts. While we haven't completed our own tests in house, this yeast is used at the brewery from which it was isolated to make very big beers in the neighborhood of 12-16% ABV and quite dry. Use this as a primary fermentor in any big Belgian beer, or to unstick that pesky stuck fermentation.

Farmhouse Sour Ale ---- This is a blend of two of our farmhouse/saison Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains, Lactobacillus brevis and Lactobacillus delbrueckii. This blend can be used for the production of farmhouse/saison style beers in which a sour/lactic character is desired without Brettanomyces funk.

We're hoping that the banking process for our new isolates will be completed soon and in time for us to include these new products in our next order. It's currently looking like the early July time frame.

Cheers, and thanks for your continued support!"
 
Are you guys just pitching multiple vials of these mixed sacc, brett, bug vials? I mean, you can't make starters of these since the sacc will multiply and eat all the food before the others get much going, i.e. Youre not going to grow any Brett or lacto in a starter of these mixed vials, right? Or are we saying there's enough Brett and bugs in the vial as shipped? Which seems unlikely. What am I missing fellas?
 
The guy from Yeast Bay said on another forum that small starters were fine for these blends, it wont throw off the ratios too much. I don't think they've done enough experimentation yet to even know what a good ratio would be. All of these yeasts are new and barely tested yet.
 
Have the Wallonian strain on its way this week to make a saison. I'm hoping it'll survive the hottest week on the east coast so far this year. Bad timing on my part.
 
Here's an update that I got on the email list:
We have a lot of Yeast Bay developments to update all of you on, including progress with merchandise, international availability of homebrew vials in Canada (OntarioBeerKegs), the UK/Europe (The Malt Miller) and Australia (Barleyman), beta testing results and new product availability. To break up all of the exciting things we have to share, we'd like to focus this mailing on the launch and availability of our four new cultures: Mélange, Amalgamation, Farmhouse Sour Ale and Dry Belgian Ale. See the links below to check out the descriptions of these new products.

We’ll be out yeast wrangling in mid-August and will not be shipping any homebrew vial orders placed through our website between August 8th and August 17th. We’re getting our first shipment of new product stock in on August 6th, and we know a lot of people are anxious to get their hands on these new cultures. So while we typically only ship Monday/Tuesday/Wednesday, we’ll be making an exception and shipping on Thursday August 7th to ensure people can get some new products in their hands before we resume shipping again on August 18th.

We've also decided to do a presale for our new products starting at 12 PM PST on August 1st which will allow you extra time to purchase some new cultures prior to our break in shipping. Please keep the following in mind when ordering:
Orders placed between August 1st and August 6th containing new cultures (Mélange, Amalgamation, Farmhouse Sour Ale and Dry Belgian Ale) will ship out August 7th.
Orders containing only our current product line up will go out as usual through August 7th.
All orders placed between August 7th and August 17th will ship out as usual on August 18th, after which point our normal Monday/Tuesday/Wednesday shipping schedule will resume.
We're really excited about these new additions to our product line up and think brewers are going to be very happy with the beers they produce. Mélange is our inaugural leap into complex mixed cultures, and we're especially looking forward to further expanding these types of offerings in the future.

We’ll be sure to post a reminder on Facebook about the presale as it approaches. Cheers, and remember to keep those fermentors full!


Nick

The Yeast Bay
 
Here are the descriptions from the website for their new products:

Mélange - "If you dig using a diverse array of unique organisms to create balanced sour beers, this delightful medley of microbes is sure to please!

Mélange is our most varied mix of fermentative organisms, intended for use in the production of sour beers in which a balance of funk and sourness is desired. This blend contains two Saccharomyces cerevisiae isolates, Saccharomyces fermentati, five Brettanomyces isolates, Lactobacillus brevis, Lactobacillus delbreuckii and Pediococcus damnosus.
Expect this blend to take 3-6+ months to create desired levels of funk and sourness, depending upon the temperature. We recommend starting with a fermentation temperature of 70-72 ºF for the first few days, and then raising the temperature to 75-80 ºF to encourage development of funk (Brettanomyces) and sourness (Lactobacillus, Pediococcus). "

Farmhouse Sour Ale - "Farmhouse Sour Ale is a blend of Saccharomyces and Lactobacillus. It was formulated for brewers wishing to create a saison with a balanced acid profile that complements the complex esters of our unique farmhouse/saison yeast strains, but without the Brettanomyces funk.
This blend contains two farmhouse/saison Saccharomyces cerevisiae isolates, Lactobacillus brevis, and Lactobacillus delbreuckii. The two Saccharomyces strains will combine to create a delightful ester profile of grapefruit and orange zest, accompanied by a mild earthiness and spiciness. The two Lactobacillus strains will produce a balanced acid profile, given a suitable supply of accessible carbohydrates that remain after the bulk of fermentation has been completed by Saccharomyces.
Expect this blend to take 1-3 months to begin creating appreciable levels of acidity, depending upon the fermentation temperature. Higher mash and fermentation temperatures will produce elevated levels of acidity."

Amalgamation - "Amalgamation is the union of our six favorite Brettanomyces isolates from our microbe library. Each isolate produces a unique bouquet of bright and fruity flavors and aromas, and the combination of all of them into one blend results in the coalescence of these unique flavors and aromas into something truly special.
Expect this blend to create a dry beer with a bright and complex fruit-forward flavor and aroma, accompanied by some funk on the nose."

Dry Belgian Ale - "Dry Belgian Ale is single strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae isolated from a unique golden strong ale. The profile is a complex and balanced mix of apple, pear and light citrus fruit with some mild spicy and peppery notes. The apparent attenuation of this strain ranges anywhere from 85-100%, depending upon the mash profile and the grist composition.
For a yeast that's as dry as it is, it creates beers with a surprising amount of balance even without the use of specialty grains or adjuncts. While we haven't completed our own tests in house, this yeast is used at the brewery from which it was isolated to make big beers that are in the neighborhood of 12-16% ABV and sufficiently dry. Use Dry Belgian Ale as a primary fermenter in any big Belgian beer, or to unstick that pesky stuck fermentation.
To achieve high attenuation, we recommend fermenting with this strain at 70-71 ºF for the first 2-3 days, and then bumping up the temperature to 74-75 ºF for the remainder of fermentation."
 
They are currently having a sale on their Northeastern Abbey. $5.50/vial. Good deal of you like to brew Belgians.


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