That’s about as clear as clear can get. Looks tasty.
That’s about as clear as clear can get. Looks tasty.
Yes, it's quite young and I intend to let it ride for a few weeks to see where it goes. I find it hard to describe the flavor, but it has absolutely none of the sweet malty goodness that I've tasted in past brews with this recipe. There is a back-end toasted biscuit flavor which I was expecting based on the grains used this time. The funny thing is that the hydro samples I tasted on brew day and even on the day I kegged it tasted promising. One thing I failed to mention is that I fined this with gelatin once it was in the keg. It's the first time I've used gelatin but the procedure is pretty straight forward so I'd be surprised if that alone would alter the taste this much, if at all. I also used gelatin the same day in a Schwarzbier I've had kegged for a couple months. It always appeared quite "murky" to me so I mixed up a half batch of gelatin to see if it would clear a bit. It seems to have helped just a bit, and it tastes fine. Oddly enough that Schwarzbier was also fermented with Lutra, the only other time I've used it.What was so bad about the batch? Off flavors? It seems pretty young and although Lutra is hailed as a clear, lager-like 48 hour and done yeast it still needs the same ale yeast conditioning in the 2 brews I made with it. 2-4 weeks in bottle/keg.
I am also curious about using lutra in a kettle sour. I'm following this in case someone comes along to share their experience using it this way.
I'll be brewing mine within the next week or so. I'll post updates with how it goes.
Changed plans a bit and will be brewing a sweet stout instead of the kettle sour this weekend. I'll still update when I get the kettle sour brewed and fermented.
I brewed my Raspberry Kettle Sour yesterday and have it souring now. After a quick boil before pitching my lactobacillus I pulled 1 liter of wort off for a starter with my Lutra slurry.
Once I pitch yeast I'll post my updates. I planned to ferment around 80F.
Hey Everyone
I , out of inexperience , brought some to Brazil
Bough online and shipped to MIA then here I didn't put on the fridge right away
the package stuffed... I would love to know if I blew it forever, or if there is even some where on the forum that talks about how to resurrect yeast
or if I should open a new thread
Thanks
My post-souring pH ended at 3.13 and pitched my starter of Lutra yesterday around 5pm and by 9pm and I had a nice krausen formed and bubbling away. May pull a gravity sample tonight to check progress.
A happy little accident.Just an update on this. The Lutra fermented the kettle sour with no issues, however it looks like I got an introduction of Brett into this beer, most likely from the fruit.
Transferred from my Flex+ fermenter to a Fermonster and have it isolated in a separate room I keep my long-aged wild/sour beers.
Kveik is very forgiving. I would put everything in the fridge now and try to brew a beer with one of the packs and see what happens.Hey Everyone
I , out of inexperience , brought some to Brazil
Bough online and shipped to MIA then here I didn't put on the fridge right away
the package stuffed... I would love to know if I blew it forever, or if there is even some where on the forum that talks about how to resurrect yeast
or if I should open a new thread
Thanks
I was a skeptic. Not a fan of Kviek in general (blasphemy I know).
I had a packet of Lutra sitting in my fridge since last summer and I decided to brew with it, no starter.
I have to say, this beer turned out clean, shockingly clean. It's not quite a lager, but it definitely earned the pseudo-lager title.
Basically a riff on Centennial Blonde with high color malt. Fermented at 69F. It's delicious:
View attachment 725846
My " lagers " just drop clear with the cold crash and a week or so in the keg fridge. Using Opshaug.
Well I followed the David Heath drying kveik yeast advice. Have enough for about 25 brews in the freezer. Underpitch with about 5cm x 5cm of flakes just lobbed into the fermenter. Real easy.
That said the other week made a big starter using Wyeast 1098 and enjoyed that for a change.
You might find that the yeast beats you to dropping out, it just falls when it's done especially as the temp falls at the same time as activity ceases. I put my fermenter under a sleeping bag and a few hot bottles of water to keep it hot for the first day or so. Then uncover and let it chill!!
No. I never use cold side finings anymore. They're a good way to oxidize otherwise perfect beer. If one uses good brewing practice and Whirfloc, most beers clear up wonderfully like that in 3ish weeks anyway.Did you fine that with gelatin or is that clear just from cold conditioning? I'm hoping to hit it with gelatin then let it sit a few weeks to drop bright
No. I never use cold side finings anymore. They're a good way to oxidize otherwise perfect beer. If one uses good brewing practice and Whirfloc, most beers clear up wonderfully like that in 3ish weeks anyway.