deadwolfbones
Well-Known Member
Thanks, TANSTAAFB, that's what I was thinking too.
It's up in the mid 60s and bubbling again.
It's up in the mid 60s and bubbling again.
beer is like physics. you think you know what it all means until you really start looking into it and doing experiments and then it all starts breaking down.
lager/beer/ale. im starting to think its all just a bunch of yeasts running about drunk.
I basically wait till fermentation is almost done or even completely done and put it in there for in between two and seven days. For beers longer in the fermenter, I tend to dry hop shortly before I bottle so I can instantly bottle when pulling the dry hop bag.@Miraculix When do you dry hop? How much? For how long?
I can only speak for myself, but I try to pitch as much as possible, staying within a reasonable range, of course. I do not really believe in negative effects of so called over pitching, but I certainly have experienced very bad results when under pitching.I take it you pitch at ale rates when doing a warm lager ferment? Or if not I wonder if the higher pitch is responsible for the 'lager' characteristics more than temp...
Maybe the whole "lager means kept in German" is false and it is a misspell of larger.
I just finished botteling the split batch with wlp800 and mj california lager. The wlp800 did have strange small and round colonies floating on top of it and smelled slightly infected. It also had a little off flavour that tasted like infection. I cannot describe it, wasn't tart or anything... tasted just off. I nearly dumped it, but as the flavour was really just a hint, I decided to go for it and bottled those 24 liters. We will see how it develops..... If it is from the KVEIK, at least there won't be any bottle bombs as the yeast of the Kveik flocked out so well that the original Kveik did not carbonate in the bottle
The mangrove jack california lager looks and tastes promising. Unfortunately, I have only 8 bottles of this one. But, it flocks well and it tastes very clean. I missed a bit the lager sulfur hint, but this might come when carbonating. I have the suspission that my beers have not enough IBUs, but that is a recipe issue.
However, the roasty flavour from the roast barley is really subdued while the beer is dark as the night. Mission accomplished, that was my goal. I cold steeped the roast barley over night, instead of mashing it.
Overall, a very good learning experience and have two new tested and working lager yeast strains in our reportoir that do work at ale temperatures. I would prefer the wlp 800 slightly based on the taste of the starter, but i cannot judge it 100%, as the infection covers a lot.
MJ CL works and is convinient as it is a dry yeast, I would definetely prefer it over the SAF Lager dry yeasts.
Both beers had 1.05 OG, WLP 800 ended with 1.02 FG and MJ CL ended up at ca. 1.013-1.015 FG(hard to tell with my current hydrometer). But you have to take those readings with a grain of salt as I do not trust this hydrometer that much.....
I have the feeling that some mj packs might have suffered during transportation or that they have problems to maintain a stable yeast cell count at mjs. I had activity in less than 12 hours. Goferm sounds like a good idea to me, in addition I would recommend using two packs. Mj yeast is fairly cheap, at least here in the UK, so a second or even a third pack won't hurt. Rehydration is a must and goferm sounds like a good add-on.I plan on trying the Mj cali lager again, used it a couple months ago and had serious lag time even with rehydration, has goferm been discussed? Read that can be helpful for rehydration
I have the feeling that some mj packs might have suffered during transportation or that they have problems to maintain a stable yeast cell count at mjs. I had activity in less than 12 hours. Goferm sounds like a good idea to me, in addition I would recommend using two packs. Mj yeast is fairly cheap, at least here in the UK, so a second or even a third pack won't hurt. Rehydration is a must and goferm sounds like a good add-on.
Tbh, I don't care so much about the cost anyway. For me it is more a question of convenience. I can store dry yeast forever, don't need a starter, don't need to wait........I don’t mind the idea of using go ferm but at two packs I rather buy a wyeast pack and make a small viability starter It would be about the same cost at my lbhs
so next lager type brew I’ll try goferm rehydration
I tried brewing a Marzen using 34/70 fermented at 67 degrees. It cleared well in the fermenter, but got a really bad chill haze when the bottles were refrigerated. I've always read that chill haze doesn't affect flavor, but this was so intense that it did affect the flavor - to the point that I couldn't tell if it had a lager or ale flavor. I left several in the fridge for a month or so, and they cleared. Then it seemed to have a lager flavor. This isn't practical for me on a routine basis, so I won't try it again with 34/70. But I plan to try a brew using Mangrove Jacks M-54 California Lager yeast.
It surely is. It just won't compact as well as other good ale yeasts do. Flavour wise I would actually compare it to Nottingham, no wonder given the fact that Nottingham is a blend of an ale and a lager yeast. But Nottingham flocs and compacts better.Sounds like it might be a good dual purpose yeast.
Dont know, never had that one. MJ CL is the cleanest thing I ever brewed, pretty much zero yeast character, if this answers your question.Is the mangrove jacks cleaner than wyeast 2112?
I would have loved to get a slight sulfur note from the mj cl, a lot of lagers have it. But not this one.I have a batch of Michael Dawson's bocce swerve on tap that I used 2112 in. It is fairly clean. I did however get some sulphur notes in the finished beer even after lagering for a few weeks. Think I may have to try the mangrove jacks cali lager in another batch of the same beer to see how compares.
For those who are curious about my process. Made a 3l starter (stir plate). Pitched at 58F and let it rise to 62F for the first few days then bumped it to 67F for a week and a half, cold crashed, then kegged a week later.
I had the same. I do not know why some people get it and some don't when fermenting with it warm.Update on my 34/70 fermented Blonde lager. I gave it a taste yesterday when the krausen was falling (bought a new wine thief and just HAD to test it) and I'm getting some banana-ey clove-y esters out of it, but they're not overpowering and quite pleasant. Krausen is completely down today and temperature at 60. Will let it sit until Friday then keg, and it will then sit in the kegerator another 3 weeks before testing again. I'm liking this experiment so far.
I just tried one of the Chevallier Smash WLP800 beers I made as a starter for my Schwarzbier....
BEST.WARM.LAGER.YEAST.EVER!
The beer is completely clean, not a single hint of off flavour and tastes like a Lager. I did zero temp control, it went up and down during the day and the night. I love it.
The Chevallier is also highly itneresting. It tastes like there is 10-20% crystal malt inside but it isn't. It is only Chevallier. I love it. It tastes like a very nice Crystal malt added at exactly the right amount. I think @Northern_Brewer did mention that before, it is really a malt flavour on it's own.
And back to the wlp800, it actually floccs very well (given the fact that it is supposed to be a "hidden" ale strain, it does not surprise me). I am impressed. Would really recommend giving this one a try! It might be almost a bit too clean as there was no sulfur which one can get with some lager strains.
I can also see this one shine in a IPL or however you would call an IPA with lager yeast. This is the cleanest tasting beer I made so far.
Anyway, great yeast for warm lagers! My new favourite!