I've used yeast that was supposedly from Trappist strains, and I never got the rank smells or flavors that are in beers like Christmas Ale. I wonder what causes those things. It can't be any of the ingredients I've used.
As for Orval, it has very little of that stuff. It makes me wonder why brett hasn't always been as mainstream as saccharomyces.
For years, I was told brett tasted and smelled like rotten things from barnyards, and I can understand why that would drive people away, but if it's not true, why isn't it more commonly used? Judging from the difficulty of getting it out of equipment, it must be very hardy and unlikely to stall, and because it's dry, it must get a lot of attenuation. But I don't know how much of what I've been told is true.
As for Orval, it has very little of that stuff. It makes me wonder why brett hasn't always been as mainstream as saccharomyces.
For years, I was told brett tasted and smelled like rotten things from barnyards, and I can understand why that would drive people away, but if it's not true, why isn't it more commonly used? Judging from the difficulty of getting it out of equipment, it must be very hardy and unlikely to stall, and because it's dry, it must get a lot of attenuation. But I don't know how much of what I've been told is true.