Protos
The Gulper
Recently I got access to ordering Polish Gozdawa dry yeasts. In time, I want to try their full range and compare their yeasts to more familiar brands, like Lallemand, Fermentis and Mangrove Jack's. For now, I ordered Czech Pilsner, German W35 Lager, VLB Lager, W34/70 Lager, Scottish Ale, German Altbier, Bavarian Wheat and Trappist Rochefort. The source for Gozdawa yeasts is mysterious, some say they're just repacks of other brands, some say they come from some obscure German factory.
As a free bonus, the seller added to my order three Gozdawa yeasts not mentioned on the Gozdawa website and seemingly having no matches in other brands:
- Belgian Sour
- German Sour
- Weiss Sauerbier.
All three contain two species of microbes: Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Lachancea thermotolerans. Fermentation temperature suggested for all three is 14-25°C. From which I deduce, it's just good old Philly mixed with, I guess, Belgian Wit, German Altbier and I don't know what for Weiss, probably Bavarian Wheat.
I've never tasted sour beers and I poorly tolerate acidity in all my beverages and foods, but with such a generous gift I feel obliged to delve into the murky waters of sour brewing
As a free bonus, the seller added to my order three Gozdawa yeasts not mentioned on the Gozdawa website and seemingly having no matches in other brands:
- Belgian Sour
- German Sour
- Weiss Sauerbier.
All three contain two species of microbes: Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Lachancea thermotolerans. Fermentation temperature suggested for all three is 14-25°C. From which I deduce, it's just good old Philly mixed with, I guess, Belgian Wit, German Altbier and I don't know what for Weiss, probably Bavarian Wheat.
I've never tasted sour beers and I poorly tolerate acidity in all my beverages and foods, but with such a generous gift I feel obliged to delve into the murky waters of sour brewing