I brought this up in another thread but I figured it belonged here instead. One of the other forum members mentioned that he was using Pacman Yeast (Wyeast 1764).
It is mentioned on the Wyeast website that this yeast is a proprietary strain from Rogue, and is for sale only to home brewers.
Additionally, I noticed on the White Labs website under the FAQ, that they do not use genetically engineered strains of yeast. This led me to believe that genetically engineered strains must be more common than I know of.
So I was wondering how this all works. Does a brewery create a genetically engineered yeast strain, so that they can protect their recipe? What would happen if a commercial brewery would use the Pacman yeast, instead of a home brewer? I understand that there are yeasts that are commonly used, and that many breweries use "regular" yeasts. I just wanted to hear from any of you who might have some insight from either the standpoint of a chemist who deals with this, or a commercial brewer working with unique strains like these.
It is mentioned on the Wyeast website that this yeast is a proprietary strain from Rogue, and is for sale only to home brewers.
Additionally, I noticed on the White Labs website under the FAQ, that they do not use genetically engineered strains of yeast. This led me to believe that genetically engineered strains must be more common than I know of.
So I was wondering how this all works. Does a brewery create a genetically engineered yeast strain, so that they can protect their recipe? What would happen if a commercial brewery would use the Pacman yeast, instead of a home brewer? I understand that there are yeasts that are commonly used, and that many breweries use "regular" yeasts. I just wanted to hear from any of you who might have some insight from either the standpoint of a chemist who deals with this, or a commercial brewer working with unique strains like these.