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Omega Lutra yeast?

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The Baltic Porter came out fantastic! Love that Lutra.
Can I ask at what temperature did you pitch/ferment for the Baltic Porter? For the (Dark) Scottish Ale I pitched at ~30C and insulated the fermenter without further temperature control because I pressure fermented directly in a keg and ambient temperature of the room was ~20C. I'm not getting any ester profile at all, and I was wondering whether I should push the temperature further (35C?) since I would like some slight ester profile in the Porter, and not pressure ferment for the yeast to be more expressive.

Thanks.
 
Can I ask at what temperature did you pitch/ferment for the Baltic Porter? For the (Dark) Scottish Ale I pitched at ~30C and insulated the fermenter without further temperature control because I pressure fermented directly in a keg and ambient temperature of the room was ~20C. I'm not getting any ester profile at all, and I was wondering whether I should push the temperature further (35C?) since I would like some slight ester profile in the Porter, and not pressure ferment for the yeast to be more expressive.

Thanks.
I'm asking myself a similar question.

For a clean lager like beer, would it be ok to pitch at 35c and from there on, either wrap it in a blanket or let it stand at room temperature, or should I bring down the temperature to room temperature before pitching, without any insulation of the fermenter?

I want a clean beer, but never brewed with lutra.
 
I'm asking myself a similar question.

For a clean lager like beer, would it be ok to pitch at 35c and from there on, either wrap it in a blanket or let it stand at room temperature, or should I bring down the temperature to room temperature before pitching, without any insulation of the fermenter?

I want a clean beer, but never brewed with lutra.
I pitched with wort at 30C and room temp at 20C and insulated with a thick blanket. Set the spunding valve to 5psi for the first 36h, then set to 20psi and left it for a week. I got a very clean profile this way.
 
I pitched with wort at 30C and room temp at 20C and insulated with a thick blanket. Set the spunding valve to 5psi for the first 36h, then set to 20psi and left it for a week. I got a very clean profile this way.
Thanks, but I wouldn't ferment with any pressure and pressure surpresss ester formation. So we don't know if it's the yeast, or the pressure that gave you the clean beer.
 
Can I ask at what temperature did you pitch/ferment for the Baltic Porter? For the (Dark) Scottish Ale I pitched at ~30C and insulated the fermenter without further temperature control because I pressure fermented directly in a keg and ambient temperature of the room was ~20C. I'm not getting any ester profile at all, and I was wondering whether I should push the temperature further (35C?) since I would like some slight ester profile in the Porter, and not pressure ferment for the yeast to be more expressive.

Thanks.


I'm in South Carolina, so it was still pretty warm outside when I brewed. I chilled to about 85f and pitched. Fermentation stayed in the 80's. I'm old school, so just an immersion chiller with my garden hose. I couldn't get much lower than 85 in October. I'm sold on Lutra and Hornindal. I can see myself using those yeasts almost exclusively.
 
Got my 2nd try with lutra fermenting now. First one had promise, I liked the light fruitiness but I stupidly kegged it on day 5, so the yeastyness never went away. Kicked myself, brewing for 15+ yrs and have never kegged that early haha.
Another blonde style ale, trying this one at 22c
 
I think the 3 days and its done is misleading - still needs conditioning and seems to get better and cleaner with time. I have a cali common that's drinking nicely now, but I went through the general ale yeast stages I use. 1 week primary, 2 weeks in keg, drinking. Still faster than a lager.
 
Just ordered grains for a robust porter recipe I'm going to try with Lutra. In the past I've underpitched to stress the yeast but I'll pitch the whole pouch with this one and see how it goes. Interested to see the results.
 
Just ordered grains for a robust porter recipe I'm going to try with Lutra. In the past I've underpitched to stress the yeast but I'll pitch the whole pouch with this one and see how it goes. Interested to see the results.
I have a porter fermenting right now that I considered using Lutra on but my LHBS was sold out of it. I went with WLP002 instead. I hope you post back with your results and impressions as I’d be interested in hearing your thoughts on using it in a porter.
 
I think the 3 days and its done is misleading - still needs conditioning and seems to get better and cleaner with time. I have a cali common that's drinking nicely now, but I went through the general ale yeast stages I use. 1 week primary, 2 weeks in keg, drinking. Still faster than a lager.

Yeah, I got a bit carried away and wanted to try it. Stupid haha
 
@BongoYodeler, I'd be happy to post back with my impressions. Wondering if anyone has aged any beers using Lutra or Kviek in general? May put away a few bottles after packaging to see how it develops.
I did a Voss kviek mild ale which I dry hopped with dank US hops. Beautiful when young but after a few weeks in the bottle the hops faded right out. I guess that happens with any strain though
 
I did a Voss kviek mild ale which I dry hopped with dank US hops. Beautiful when young but after a few weeks in the bottle the hops faded right out. I guess that happens with any strain though
I've heard similar reports from others that the yeast character drops off but wasn't sure if that would translate to any negative effects after say 6+ months in the bottle.
 
I think the 3 days and its done is misleading - still needs conditioning and seems to get better and cleaner with time. I have a cali common that's drinking nicely now, but I went through the general ale yeast stages I use. 1 week primary, 2 weeks in keg, drinking. Still faster than a lager.

Yeah, I noticed with the Pseudo-lager I brewed, it kept getting better the longer I conditioned it. But the 3 days and done as far as primary fermentation is pretty spot on.
 
Here’s another Lutra beer, this one was fermented in the mid 70s and keg conditioned for 2 weeks. Clean yeast profile and it seems to be dropping much clearer in the keg. A great yeast for this style.

California common. Pils, Crystal 20, special roast and northern brewer hops

7E4EB689-DA79-44ED-8852-9CE3CEED9C39.jpeg
 
Here’s another Lutra beer, this one was fermented in the mid 70s and keg conditioned for 2 weeks. Clean yeast profile and it seems to be dropping much clearer in the keg. A great yeast for this style.

California common. Pils, Crystal 20, special roast and northern brewer hops

NICE!!!!
:bigmug:
 
Here’s another Lutra beer, this one was fermented in the mid 70s and keg conditioned for 2 weeks. Clean yeast profile and it seems to be dropping much clearer in the keg. A great yeast for this style.

California common. Pils, Crystal 20, special roast and northern brewer hops

View attachment 709371
Great pic. I’m thirsty now.
 
My 2nd attempt is a very pale pale ale and it finished in a few days at 25c. I “cold crashed” it at 15c for 48hrs and it’s fairly clear. Will keg tomorrow. I think it’s a very good fairly neutral yeast with light fruitiness
 
My ingredients for the robust porter recipe along with the Lutra arrived today. Just finished the brew day and ended up .002 gravity points higher than expected. I discovered prior to milling that my mill gap had crept out of spec, i.e. my calibrated credit card lol. I also found out just how heavy a grain bag with 15lbs of soaked grist really is. I've previously mashed all the grain together but today decided to begin the mash with just the 2-row and Munich, saving black patent/crystal 40l/chocolate malt for steeping so we'll see how that goes. Before next brew day I'm going to have to find out somewhere in the kitchen to anchor the hoist. In the end all went well and im impatiently waiting for it to finish so I can try it out.
 
I pitched one pack of lutra this morning in a 1.031 og (first non-biab batch, horrible efficiency, stuck mash, too much liquid left on the mash tun and so on.....) American pilsener type of beer. I was wondering if I should dry hop or not, but I decided not to, just to be able to percieve as much as I can that may come from the yeast.
 
I pitched one pack of lutra this morning in a 1.031 og (first non-biab batch, horrible efficiency, stuck mash, too much liquid left on the mash tun and so on.....) American pilsener type of beer. I was wondering if I should dry hop or not, but I decided not to, just to be able to percieve as much as I can that may come from the yeast.
I bottled it today, after about one week from pitching. It was one of the clearest beers I ever bottled. The yeast was building thick chunks and stayed in the fermenter. The beer tasted very promising. Very very clean, God hop aroma and good malt flavour. A bit green still, but given the fact that it's so young, it was outstanding.

The only thing that I could point at in a slightly negative way is, it was a tiny bit tart, but that might fade away with carbonation and lower temperature. I had this before with other yeasts and I was never able to perceive the tartness in the finished beer. No infection tartness, it's yeast related.

The good thing is, I get nothing from the yeast itself. It's just clean.

If this turns out well, it might be my new favourite clean yeast. Quick, no temperature control needed, clear beer after short amount of time, no esters, kind of like the perfect APA or IPA yeast imo.

I might do a maibock with it next to see what's happening with higher abv brews. This might get interesting.

The beer I bottled already tasted like a lager.
 
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