aaronm13
Well-Known Member
Would love to get my hands on some of that Cosmic Punch, looks wild. It'll never launch over here unfortunately with it being GMO, the EU will probably never go for it.
I was under the same impression as couchsending. Use hops in mash with high amount of precursors and GMO Cosmic Punch yeast. Then you get thiol production.
I know we all just got our hands on this stuff but wondering what the best temperature is to maximize the thiol production.
I agree that the survivable data charts vs the brewers association link I posted appear at odds, but I don't think the survivable chart actually includes the precursor form of 3MH, it just includes "3MH" listed int he legend in addition to the fact that cascade is on the low end due to the lower alcohols, hop esters and acids as well, all of which contribute to the "survivable" chart. In contrast, the brewers association presentation separates out free vs precursor forms of 3MH in separate charts. While cascade and Simcoe are low in free 3mh thiols they are very high in precursor form. Cosmic Punch has marketed the yeast to biotransform the precursor form of 3MH to 3MH - primarily grapefruit with some passion fruit, but not as much passion fruit as 3MHA which is exclusively tropical/passion fruit. So the goal is to load up the wort in the fermenter with as much 3MH and 3MH precursors as possible for cosmic punch do do its job. Very interesting to say the least. Would really like to see other third party research on this topic rather than just the manufacturer too, but still fascinating.That presentation is a bit weird as it conflicts with the whole “survivable” chart that YCH released last year. They chart the 3MH precursor and cascade has very little. HBC520 has the most according to that chart, followed by Millenium, then maybe idaho7 and Comet.
I was screwing around with Mt Hood and Millenium on the hotside for a while. Not 100% sure I noticed any sort of additional tropical character or not but I wasn’t making the same exact beer over and over.
An interesting observation is the similarity of Mt Hood to Citra when it comes to “Survivability”. They’re incredibly similar and obviously Mt Hood is a lot cheaper.
I can't find where I read it but agree that 3MH in any form increases in the boil. But I don't think that cosmic punch specifically was designed to convert 3MH to 3MHA - only "unlock" or convert the 3MH precursor to 3MH. I can't speak to whether the hops high in bound 3MH would "release" the other bound 3MH already present but Omega is banking on the fact that its their yeast doing the biotransforming from precursor form to thiol form. I'll be doing a couple of brews with this yeast (one at present is soft crashing) and considering doing one without the soft crash pre-dry hop in order to allow as much of the cosmic punch yeast to biotransform the precursors from the dry hops to their thiol compounds. Still don't know though if I want to try adding the DH to high Krausen though. Feels like we are living in the Wild West these days with figuring all this out especially when a GMO yeast comes our way. I will say though that my hydrometer sample after FG and pre-soft crash was REALLY good and had strong grapefruit followed by great tropical vibe when using only Columbus and cascade hot side. So there seems to be something to this stuff IMHO.True there is a difference between bound and free I guess... however 3MH doesn’t generally volatize during the boil, if anything it increases (which could be from malt??). So starting with hops high in 3MH (bound or free) on the hotside will leave you with more in the fermenter. You’re looking for yeast to convert 3MH to 3MHA which is the tropical/passion fruit thiol. If not 100% sure but I believe you’d have to add the Hops high in bound 3MH to the cold side during fermentation in order for them to be released?? Could be wrong on that.
The amount of people that dont use fermcap is astounding to me.Fermcap!!!
What did your hotside schedule look like?I can't find where I read it but agree that 3MH in any form increases in the boil. But I don't think that cosmic punch specifically was designed to convert 3MH to 3MHA - only "unlock" or convert the 3MH precursor to 3MH. I can't speak to whether the hops high in bound 3MH would "release" the other bound 3MH already present but Omega is banking on the fact that its their yeast doing the biotransforming from precursor form to thiol form. I'll be doing a couple of brews with this yeast (one at present is soft crashing) and considering doing one without the soft crash pre-dry hop in order to allow as much of the cosmic punch yeast to biotransform the precursors from the dry hops to their thiol compounds. Still don't know though if I want to try adding the DH to high Krausen though. Feels like we are living in the Wild West these days with figuring all this out especially when a GMO yeast comes our way. I will say though that my hydrometer sample after FG and pre-soft crash was REALLY good and had strong grapefruit followed by great tropical vibe when using only Columbus and cascade hot side. So there seems to be something to this stuff IMHO.
I tried it and still got blowoffs, some of those british strains dont give a f about antifoam hehe.The amount of people that dont use fermcap is astounding to me.
Why bother with blowoffs and all that nonsense?
It doesn't necessarily help with blowouts during fermentation, but it's a must for big starters and boiling absurd amounts of wort in a kettle that's technically too small to do so.I tried it and still got blowoffs, some of those british strains dont give a f about antifoam hehe.
Lower ferm temps do help though
So far i've yet to have an issue, and I don't always have a ton of headspace. I'm sure it'll happen at some point though. I've got my IPAs going with a little pressure now though, which will also suppress foaming.I tried it and still got blowoffs, some of those british strains dont give a f about antifoam hehe.
Lower ferm temps do help though
Help reduce or increase it?It can also help the foam in your glass
Increase it.Help reduce or increase it?
Never had problems myself BTW.
Any you noticed a drop in brew house efficiency after switching to spelt malt?
My dropped consistently 10 percentage point over the last two brews.
For this batch with cosmic punch, I went with:What did your hotside schedule look like?
wow 10 points is a lot. I have not experienced this type of drop myself but considering spelt malt is huskless (at least what I have - bestmaltz) and in the wheat family, I bring rice hulls to the party to help out AND I take my time with the "manual" poor man's fly sparging i.e. pouring spare water 1 qt at a time to keep about 1inch liquid above the grain bed. With about ~18% spelt comprising my grain bill Im averaging about 78% mash/lauter efficiency overall.Any you noticed a drop in brew house efficiency after switching to spelt malt?
My dropped consistently 10 percentage point over the last two brews.
It may not be a true drop in efficiency. Your program may not have the correct yield potential set for spelt grain. Should be around 35ppg Could even be less. Oats are a 32ppg, I believe.wow 10 points is a lot. I have not experienced this type of drop myself but considering spelt malt is huskless (at least what I have - bestmaltz) and in the wheat family, I bring rice hulls to the party to help out AND I take my time with the "manual" poor man's fly sparging i.e. pouring spare water 1 qt at a time to keep about 1inch liquid above the grain bed. With about ~18% spelt comprising my grain bill Im averaging about 78% mash/lauter efficiency overall.
Increase it.
Foam retention proteins can only been used once, so the less foam produced in the production of the beer, the more proteins available for head retention in the finished product.
Looks like Get Er Brewed are an affiliated distributer of the J Haas stuff too going by their youtube video.
Do you have literature to support this? I’ve done quite a bit of research on head retention over the years and cant say I’ve ever heard that.Increase it.
Foam retention proteins can only been used once, so the less foam produced in the production of the beer, the more proteins available for head retention in the finished product.
You can always get a second fermonster, purge it and then close transfer to it. You’ll get it off the trub after the softcrash and then dryhop in that one. - just a thought if you go that route.The Fermonster, like dgallo uses would be a nice side step for me but can’t dump yeast trub and I question it’s durability. A spike conical seems nice but that extra hassle of cleaning all those parts or dealing with a CIP pump seems like a hassle.
I’ll try to find the source on it.Do you have literature to support this? I’ve done quite a bit of research on head retention over the years and cant say I’ve ever heard that.