kl Roosevelt brewer
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- May 15, 2018
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You guys all have convinced me that when I finally build my batch of beer next week I am going to double sprinkle a double dose of us 05
I feel that the brewer needs to be careful about some of these procedures [in-line responses]:
[...]
IMO some improvements should wait until the brewer has some experience. I agree with these points, but they should be done with adequate knowledge.
Well when you think about it those big conical Brewing primaries I see online with the trub trap on the bottom if I understand it correctly that is a 1 vessel fermenter and they don't use a secondary. I don't have one of those but I will use the bucket and not use a secondary. Then you guys are going to have to teach me how to save and reuse my yeast
Well I just ordered Palmer's how to brew book 4th edition figured it couldn't hurt to put off Brewing my first batch for a few days till I read the book.
I haven't brewed any extract beer recipes except for only one years and years ago. I pretty much have been a Mead and cider maker and trying something new with Maple wine using just pure maple syrup and that seems to be going okay. But today I ordered the dead ringer IPA malt extract kit with specialty grains from Northern Brewer and it comes with the dry yeast us 05. Can anybody give me pointers on how to use this yeast? Do I hydrated the same way I do with Mead using Go Firm? What is the protocol
If you go to the Fermentis website and download the spec sheet it has rehydration instructions there, and no mention of just sprinkling on the wort.
https://fermentis.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/SafAle-US-05.pdf
Here are the rehydration instructions from Fermentis (Nov 2016 Tech Data Sheet)...An undated bulletin I downloaded in 2013 has the exact same language...
Did they mean to say 30 seconds instead of 30 minutes and forgot the rest? Lost in translation?
By pitching 2 packs, you're compensating for killing off half of each. That's why you don't see a difference.
Making starters with dry yeast is trickier since the inoculation rate is much too high in a typical 2 liter starter. Use a larger starter or pitch less dry yeast. Again, proper rehydration gives you twice the viable cells from the start compared to just sprinkling.
This is a fact....
The "rehydrators" forget the dead sprinkled cells provide a massive dose of nutrients allowing the surviving cells to complete a healthy fermentation.
Has anyone seen a study on cell counts making a starter with dry yeast? If it is true that you kill off half of the cells pitching in wort. Then you are really starting with half a pack then building back up. You might end up with the same cell counts after doing the starter that the pack held in the first place!
Till now, in the beer world, you had to take great care of yeasts prior pitching. You had to rehydrate and acclimatise them while watching water and must temperature carefully.
With E2U™, you will save time, contribute to sustainability and gain comfort. Offer yourself an E2U™ active dry yeast. It has an extended shelf life. You can pitch it directly. You keep the same quality of viability, fermentation abilities and organoleptic profiles.
Is there a list of specific problems (off flavors, ...) that I should be looking for if I continue to not rehydrate dry yeast?
I read somewhere lately that dry Pilsner/Lager yeasts aren't quite Pilsner/Lager yeasts... Something to do with them no being able to survive the drying or rehydration process, IIRC.
Am I supposed to skim off the hot break at the beginning of my boil or let it fall back in
Definitely leave it. As to trying to remove it at the end of the boil, well, here we go again with many different methods and opinions. Personally, I remove as much as I can with a large kitchen strainer (scoop, dump, repeat), then 'whirlpool' with a big spoon to get everything spinning. Wait (patiently, if you can) about thirty minutes, and the remaining solids will mostly be in a pile in the center of the kettle. From here it depends a lot on your equipment. I pump my wort from a manifold around the bottom of the kettle, through a counterflow chiller and into a fermenter, cooled and ready for yeast. I don't know what you'll be doing, but whatever you do, be careful of hot wort! Don't pour hot liquid into glass or plastic.Am I supposed to skim off the hot break at the beginning of my boil or let it fall back in
That will work fine. Contamination isn't really an issue until you get below about 140°F, so don't be in too big a hurry to handle 5 gallons of boiling liquid. Let it cool naturally, a couple of hours won't hurt a thing. Once it's safe to handle, chill and get it in the fermenter and yeast pitched as soon as you can. If given a fair start, yeast can defend it's territory pretty well. Until then, cool wort is a perfect growth medium for all kinds of nasty stuff.I am working with very basic beginner equipment for my first batch. I am going to use a fermenter bucket as my primary and I'm not going to go to secondary fermenter. What would happen if I took my boiling Wort at the end of the boil and poured it through a sterilized sanitized stainless steel kitchen strainer into my sanitize fermenter bucket then clean out my brew pot 5 gallon stainless steel and pour the Wort back from my primary bucket back into my stainless and then cool it down in the sink in a cold water bath ice thing
What would happen if I took my boiling Wort at the end of the boil and poured it through a sterilized sanitized stainless steel kitchen strainer into my sanitize fermenter bucket then clean out my brew pot 5 gallon stainless steel and pour the Wort back from my primary bucket back into my stainless and then cool it down in the sink in a cold water bath ice thing
kl Roosevelt brewer has started a separate thread on the subject of skimming hotbreak, I suggest further discussion of that topic happens over there.
Boilovers just don't happen if you use a product containing simet(h)icone - either one sold for brewing such as Fermcap S or sold as an over-the-counter treatment for excess wind.
I asked the guy at the lhbs if I needed a hop bag when I bought the kit and he said no because I'm using pellets
I asked the guy at the lhbs if I needed a hop bag when I bought the kit and he said no because I'm using pellets
Feel free to do so, but please start a new thread for it.I would like to take you up on that offer, that is to have a kit that I purchase run through the HBT