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Voss Kveik yeast is a monster

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yes it has the orange and I could detect a slight smokiness. Every time I've used it had this slightly in the finish.
I could see it being perfect for Black IPA, which I haven't brewed in a couple years. Might be time to brew another one.
 
I've seen a lot of chatter about using the Voss in a stout on this thread. Did anyone follow through? Thinking about doing it myself. I'll be gone for 10 days following brew, so I don't want to have to monitor ferm temperatures or set up any kind of temp control if I don't have to.
 
I have a batch of breakfast stout that i did with voss. Very good. No esters. Really lets the adjucts shine. Currently kegging a 4.5% porter that i did with hornindal
I've seen a lot of chatter about using the Voss in a stout on this thread. Did anyone follow through? Thinking about doing it myself. I'll be gone for 10 days following brew, so I don't want to have to monitor ferm temperatures or set up any kind of temp control if I don't have to.
 
I could see it being perfect for Black IPA, which I haven't brewed in a couple years. Might be time to brew another one.
And it was, at least the Hornindal was. I used it for a nice 7% black IPA. Still on tap actually and it's one of my favorite beers I've made in a long long time. I can imagine Voss being very good for the style also.
 
I have a batch of breakfast stout that i did with voss. Very good. No esters. Really lets the adjucts shine. Currently kegging a 4.5% porter that i did with hornindal

Thanks @jaymosbeershack. My OG is slated to be about 1.064, so it'll finish out at 6% plus. My plan was to leave it in primary for 3-4 weeks to batch condition then bottle condition afterwards. I've never had trouble with brews going that long in primary, but I wasn't sure if the kveiks are a little different.
 
I've seen a lot of chatter about using the Voss in a stout on this thread. Did anyone follow through? Thinking about doing it myself. I'll be gone for 10 days following brew, so I don't want to have to monitor ferm temperatures or set up any kind of temp control if I don't have to.
I've done several porters around 5.5% with Voss and have had very good results every time. Didn't notice the oranginess that I get when I use it in pale ales.
 
I've done several porters around 5.5% with Voss and have had very good results every time. Didn't notice the oranginess that I get when I use it in pale ales.

Good to know! Everything I've gathered says it will ferment very clean at room temperature and have fruitiness the higher the temp is. I really want to use it as my house strain to not have to worry about it being too fickle with fluctuations in temp.
 
I have a batch of breakfast stout that i did with voss. Very good. No esters. Really lets the adjucts shine. Currently kegging a 4.5% porter that i did with hornindal
I brewed two stouts this Monday the small 1.055 is already at 1.015 and the large 1.100 is slowing. 3 freaking days with imperial labs “Loki” (Voss).and that is at 70 degrees. In order to get orange esters you need to under pitch really under pitch. That is why I think it comes in 1 gram packets. I did this with a barley wine a couple of months ago, it came out very orange but it didn’t really mesh with a barley wine. Voss also seems to promote a syrupy mouth feel, (extra glycerin?) and seems way sweeter that 1.018.
 
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Good to know! Everything I've gathered says it will ferment very clean at room temperature and have fruitiness the higher the temp is. I really want to use it as my house strain to not have to worry about it being too fickle with fluctuations in temp.

This is it. The ease of use is what sells it for me.
 
I bought the Hornindal from that seller and seems to be ok but only made a starter so far with a bit of lager wort. Tasted clean from what i can tell.
 
I just picked up some Imperial Voss Kveik for an Imperial Black IPA and have two questions:
  1. Any experience/tips for capturing and reusing slurry?
  2. Should I follow the "standard" procedure with reusing slurry going from low OG to high OG, or can this beast of a yeast go from high OG to low OG with no ill effects?
Thanks!
 
In Norway they skin off the top but for non open ferment I would say follow standard, this yeast is resilient.
Not always. Check http://www.garshol.priv.no/download/farmhouse/kveik.html for each strain to see if it should harvested from the top (skim krausen) or bottom (save the slurry after fermentation).

Voss is traditionally bottom harvested. However, I think Imperial is a single strain isolate. In that case it doesn't actually matter, just do what you're comfortable with.
 
I harvested mine from the bottom as I noticed it didn't produce a huge krausen.
 
I thought if you blinked you missed the krausen with this stuff?
More or less, yeah. Pretty difficult to dry hop at high krausen when making NEIPAs. So I basically just, you know, don't do that.
 
More or less, yeah. Pretty difficult to dry hop at high krausen when making NEIPAs. So I basically just, you know, don't do that.

Yeah, it's a bit out in the schedule but I'mmatrya blue moon for my first Voss attempt. Julius hops. Complete orange bomb.
 
Nice. That sounds solid. I'm wanting to pick up some more Hothead or Hornindal. Really really liked it in a blonde ale and black IPA. Missing the ease of use: no oxygenation, chill to 90F, done.
 
I have been assuming 8 to 12 hours in is high krausen (I ferment in 10 gal corneys so I can’t see) with pretty good success. But it will come down to your conditions and process.
 
The hype is real folks.
I abused the living ***** out of a tiny (3g) vial I got my paws on and it still produced a fantastic beer.
  • Pitched at over 40°c
  • No temp control
  • Carbed up fine in the bottle
  • Easy to harvest
Gonna treat the next iteration really nice like, see if I can get a nice clean "Pilsner" out of it. I shall report back in due time
 
The hype is real folks.
I abused the living poopye out of a tiny (3g) vial I got my paws on and it still produced a fantastic beer.
  • Pitched at over 40°c
  • No temp control
  • Carbed up fine in the bottle
  • Easy to harvest
Gonna treat the next iteration really nice like, see if I can get a nice clean "Pilsner" out of it. I shall report back in due time
Let us know!

You can also try the variety ubbe, it is supposed to be like a lager if fermented at 37c. That's what I want to do next.
 
Let us know!

You can also try the variety ubbe, it is supposed to be like a lager if fermented at 37c. That's what I want to do next.

Honestly trying to keep a beer at 37c sounds like too much work. I'm really a fan of the KISS principle. Also, I want to have as few ingredients as possible for turnover purposes
 
Honestly trying to keep a beer at 37c sounds like too much work. I'm really a fan of the KISS principle. Also, I want to have as few ingredients as possible for turnover purposes
Just pitch it at 37c, wrap it into a blanket and be done with it!

Till it starts to really cool, fermentation is over.

That's basically my definition of kiss!
 
One last question, I've heard that it flocculates so well it can lead to issues with bottle carbonation if left too long in the fermenter. Can anyone attest to this?

I have some porter right now, bottled 2 weeks ago, and the plastic bottles are just finally starting to firm up a bit. It was in the fermenter for 2 weeks.
 
One thing I have noticed is that although it doesn’t throw off flavors and the beer is drinkable nearly from the get go, it gets better with about a month + age. The stout I brewed four weeks ago is really starting to be great. It was a drinkable beer but nothing special.
 
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