A bit of simple sugars and switching from US05 to Nottingham should do it. I use Nottingham a lot and 1.006-1.010 is usual for beers with OG 1.055-1.065. Often screws up my calculations.
Using 3711 either by itself or with another yeast (3711 + Conan is an amazing combination IMO, but 3711 + US05 is also pretty damn good) will get a lot of beers in the 1.002-1.005 range for me. I usually pitch them both at the same time, but I really like saison esters. I typically mash beers I want to be dry in the 146-150 and add some simple sugars as well.
I actually like using 3711 as the only yeast in an IPA from time to time. It isn't traditional, but it tastes great and that is what really matters.
I've only had maybe 3 beers that were fermented only with US05 that got in the 1.005 and below range, and one was a mistake that was mashed at 145-146 for 90 minutes. US05 attenuates well, but to get that low means that almost no specialty malts can be used with only US05.
If you want to get REALLY low, go with something like champagne yeast... that's got a really high tolerance for alcohol, and will really eat every available sugar it can get ahold of.![]()
If you want to get REALLY low, go with something like champagne yeast... that's got a really high tolerance for alcohol, and will really eat every available sugar it can get ahold of.![]()
A bit of simple sugars and switching from US05 to Nottingham should do it. I use Nottingham a lot and 1.006-1.010 is usual for beers with OG 1.055-1.065. Often screws up my calculations.
I'm pretty sure that champagne yeasts like other wine yeasts aren't able to ferment maltotriose. So they won't help if the issue is longer chain sugars and not alcohol tolerance (which it shouldn't be with an OG of 1.055).