Another odd statement that I son't understand, I have gone several generations with S23 in a commercial setting (where consistency is paramount) and had fantastic results.
He has to be doing something wrong, and frankly when people post those meaningless posts it doesn't help new brewers and shy's them away from perfectly good yeast.![]()
He has to be doing something wrong, and frankly when people post those meaningless posts it doesn't help new brewers and shy's them away from perfectly good yeast.![]()
wailingguitar said:Remember, yeast isn't "designed", it is a living organism. Frankly, I don't know how Fermentis came up with the idea that it created esters when fermented cold. The vast majority of the time I have used this yeast, I fermented it around 45... and as I said have gone as low as 35 for for the bulk of fermentation. It made a clean beer every time. I have yet to taste anyone else's beer that was screwed up. I seriously do not know what people are doing to it that makes it act funny. I am actually tempted to experiment and TRY to get it to make "fruit punch" for me.
Maybe the key is to ramp it down slowly from pitching temp to cold, I don't know. Logically, saying that a yeast ferments cleaner at warm temps than cold simply doesn't make sense. Not to say that it can't be clean warm, but realistically it should be cleaner cold. Ehh, whatever... it does exactly what I need it to do, using the methods I use, both at home and in a production setting, why bother futzing with it?
This weekend I will be trying my first liquid yeast (WL 007)! I am going to brew up a starter tonight. If any of y'all have any yeast starter or liquid yeast pitching tips to share, I'm all ears!
DeafSmith said:When using the White Labs vials, open the cap very slowly - sometimes pressure builds up in there which will cause the contents to gush out, so just hold the vial upright and crack the cap open just enough to release pressure.
Thanks for the tip. I cleaned and sanitized an old growler, boiled a qt of water, stirred in 1 cup DME, gently boiled for 10 min, cooled, put in growler, shook for 2 min, added ENTIRE yeast vile (had to beat on it to get it all out), shook for another 2 min, sealed with sanitized airlock and we got bubbles this morning! I can't believe it worked!
I switched to foil, cold crashed, and tried to pitch slurry only. But by the time I dumped the liquid, I had a paste on the bottom of the jar that wouldn't come out! I used distilled water and swished it around to get it out of there. Hope it works...
fxdrider said:I wondered about this very same thing. I made a starter with Wyeast 1728 Scottish Ale Yeast yesterday in an Erlenmeyer flask that is bubbling just fine, but having read on Palmer's website the following: -
"One consideration when pitching a large starter is to pour off some of the starter liquid and only pitch the yeast slurry. One recommendation when pitching a large starter is to chill the starter overnight in the refrigerator to flocculate all of the yeast. Then the unpleasant tasting starter beer can be poured off, so only the yeast slurry will be pitched.",
I was wondering just how to get the slurry out of the flask? It seems like the distilled water would certainly work to loosen it up, but I wonder if it doesn't then becoming just the same "unpleasant tasting starter beer" that was just poured off.
HopHeadGrady said:6 days and still bubbling at least once every 20-30 seconds. Egg smell is gone, smells wicked now. Another week and I will take a gravity reading. Its been at 12C. As mentioned above I used it in a mash extract recipe I made with Muntons Continental Pilsner. I can't wait for this.
We'll find out. I have pretty vigorous deem this morning (11 hours). Looks good. Smells right. So I guess I worked.
Just curious...how much water did you use? I would think you'd only need just enough to loosen the slurry - but I've never done a starter with liquid yeast before, so this is kinda new to me.
It may be time to do a diacetyl rest.
I just dumped about 2 cups of water into the growler I used for the starter, put the sanitized lid on, shook the hell out of it, and dumped the whole shebang into my primary, shook the hell out of that, and VOILA!
I just move mine indoors around 64 degrees when I am a few points away from my target FG. I leave there to finish. Then rack to secondary and place it somewhere where it's close to 32 degrees F
If you are using an airlock, you shouldn't have to worry about car fumes. I lager in my garage
HopHeadGrady said:Ok, so I am going to rack to a secondary carboy\airlock then and toss er into the garage.
My problem is that I haven't made this recipe before so I am not sure when I will be a few points off.
HopHeadGrady said:Ok, so I am going to rack to a secondary carboy\airlock then and toss er into the garage.
My problem is that I haven't made this recipe before so I am not sure when I will be a few points off.
How do you pronounce "diacetyl" BTW?