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VSS 9097 Old Ale

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flyangler18

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I wanted to take advantage of the Wyeast High Gravity VSS (PC 9097) release, so I put on my thinking cap and cobbled together a recipe for an Old Ale.

Here are the specs for the Wyeast 9097:

Wyeast 9097-PC Old Ale Blend
Beer Styles: English Barleywine, English Strong Ale, Old Ale
Profile: To bring you a bit of English brewing heritage we developed the “Old Ale” blend, including an attenuative ale strain and a Brettanomyces strain, which will ferment well in dark worts and produce beers with nice fruitiness. Complex estery characters will emerge with age. Pie cherry and sourness will evolve from the Brettanomyces along with distinct horsey characteristics.

Alc. Tolerance 12%
Flocculation medium
Attenuation 75-80%
Temperature Range 68-75°F (20-24°C)

BeerXML file attached.

13 lbs Maris Otter
6 oz Dark Crystal
3 oz Black Patent
12 oz Blackstrap Molasses
2 lbs light DME*
1.8 oz Challenger (60 minutes)

OG: 1.085
FG: 1.017
IBU: 55

Mash at 152° for 60 minutes.

*I'm using my 5 gallon MLT so I have to make up some gravity points with extract, plus I have some hanging around that needs to be used up while it's still fresh; even with a stiff mash at 1qt/lb, I'm maxing out my MLT.

View attachment Old Ale-1.xml
 
Wish I could help, but I have no idea what to do with your XML file, so I can't see your recipe. Well, I can see it; I just can't make what's in it make sense.

Cheers!

Bob
 
Okay, that's better. (Tangentially, if someone wants to clue me in on BeerXML I'm all ears.)

The recipe looks fine! Your finished gravity will depend on your yeast management and mash profile; don't be surprised if you end up around 1020. Build a good starter, that's for sure. You need around 300 billion cells to pitch. If you build a starter until you get about 200ml of pure slurry, that'll get you the appropriate pitch. And don't forget to aerate excessively well.

Cheers!

Bob
 
I too am planning to make an Old Ale while that strain is availible. Actually, looking at your recipe mine looks very similar but with more crystal and no black patent...let us know how it turns out.
 
I too am planning to make an Old Ale while that strain is availible. Actually, looking at your recipe mine looks very similar but with more crystal and no black patent...let us know how it turns out.

Sure will! I just placed an order for my yeast last evening, so I'll be brewing this next weekend.
 
I got some too...I'm looking forward to getting a range of experiences out of this as the beer ages and the brett really starts kicking in. I noticed with the last release they dropped the VSS and now go with the PC "private collection" moniker.
 
Okay, that's better. (Tangentially, if someone wants to clue me in on BeerXML I'm all ears.)

The recipe looks fine! Your finished gravity will depend on your yeast management and mash profile; don't be surprised if you end up around 1020. Build a good starter, that's for sure. You need around 300 billion cells to pitch. If you build a starter until you get about 200ml of pure slurry, that'll get you the appropriate pitch. And don't forget to aerate excessively well.

Cheers!

Bob

I'd actually expect it to finish under 1.010 with the Brett and all ;)
 
I smell a swap cookin'!

:mug:

I'm already thinking about one potential adjustment to my recipe, as I have some Galena whole hops coming.
 
Just placed an order for this yeast myself.
I'm making a similar recipe with Special B for the dark crystal and chocolate for the black patent.

As soon as i read the description I was intrigued. And i realized I had not made an Old Ale yet so i had to do it. I'll give this one plenty of time in the secondary to develop.

Craig
 
I think we should track progress on this project; I'll start a thread here shortly once I formulate my thoughts.

Jason
 
flyangler, have you considered using treacle in place of the molasses? i know it's a bit more expensive but with a big beer and such a time investment, you might as well splurge to do it right!
 
flyangler, have you considered using treacle in place of the molasses? i know it's a bit more expensive but with a big beer and such a time investment, you might as well splurge to do it right!

I did entertain the thought; but, to my palate, I don't detect enough of a flavor difference between blackstrap and treacle.

Maybe I'll give it another go.
 
I actually don't think there is any difference beyond the name between blackstrap and treacle, blackstrap being the american name for it, treacle being the old school and english name. I'm pretty sure it's the same product.
 
Version 2.0- I'm rethinking all my recipes seeing the discrepancy between creating them in Beer Alchemy and BTP 1.5.2.

[size=+2]Wyeast 9097 Old Ale[/size]
[size=+1]19-A Old Ale[/size]
Author: Jason Konopinski
Date: 2/4/09



Size: 5.0 gal
Efficiency: 80%
Attenuation: 75.0%
Calories: 289.48 kcal per 12.0 fl oz

Original Gravity: 1.086 (1.060 - 1.090)
|=====================#==========|
Terminal Gravity: 1.022 (1.015 - 1.022)
|======================#=========|
Color: 21.57 (10.0 - 22.0)
|=======================#========|
Alcohol: 8.56% (6.0% - 9.0%)
|=====================#==========|
Bitterness: 48.7 (30.0 - 60.0)
|=================#==============|

[size=+1]Ingredients:[/size]
10.5 lb Maris Otter Pale Ale Malt
8 oz Dark Crystal Malt I
3.75 oz British Black Patent
12 oz Treacle
2 lb Dry Light Extract
1.0 oz Galena (13.0%) - added during boil, boiled 60 min

[size=-1]Results generated by BeerTools Pro 1.5.2[/size]
 
I'd think about adding both some flavor and a small amount of aroma hops. Anything British would be fine -- Goldings, Fuggles, or US equivalents like Willamette. .5 to 1 oz at 20 minutes and at flameout.

Otherwise, it looks tasty to me.
 
I'd think about adding both some flavor and a small amount of aroma hops. Anything British would be fine -- Goldings, Fuggles, or US equivalents like Willamette. .5 to 1 oz at 20 minutes and at flameout.

Otherwise, it looks tasty to me.

I think the delicate flavor and aroma would just be wasted in a beer as big and rich as this; even more so when the Brett character emerges.
 
+1. I don't think there's much room for flavor/aroma hops in this style, especially with this yeast.

Although, the thought did cross my mind to use Fuggles in flavor and aroma additions. The earthiness might really work well and not be overshadowed by the Brett. My precious EKG would be obliterated!

Jason
 
My olde ale went in the fermenter Saturday. Ended up with a 1.084 OG using about 220g of black strap molasses. I think this will be an interesting beer after some age I believe it will get a little oak in the secondary.

Craig
 
My next brew is an old ale. I worry about the brett in this yeast as I don't want to contaminate all my plastic and brew space with a bacterium that I cannot get rid of.

I was really excited to see this yeast on the market until I saw the dread word "brett".

Am I waaay to worried/paranoid? Should I just go ahead with Wyeast 1028 or another english yeast?

Thanks!
 
My next brew is an old ale. I worry about the brett in this yeast as I don't want to contaminate all my plastic and brew space with a bacterium that I cannot get rid of.

I was really excited to see this yeast on the market until I saw the dread word "brett".

Am I waaay to worried/paranoid? Should I just go ahead with Wyeast 1028 or another english yeast?

Thanks!

Brett isn't bacteria - it's yeast.

It all depends on what you are after. If you have previously had Brett beers and enjoy them, then I would go ahead with it. I am inclined to say that yes, you are being overly paranoid. I haven't infected any of my post-Brett batches, using the same equipment. If you can clean and sanitize, you can brewing synchronously with Brettanomyces and Saccharomyces.
 

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