Glycerin/glycerol is the correct stuff to use. Glycol is the stuff to avoid - that's antifreeze.
Yuri_Rage said:Glycerin/glycerol is the correct stuff to use. Glycol is the stuff to avoid - that's antifreeze.
Glycerol, also well known as glycerin and glycerine, and less commonly as propane-1,2,3-triol, 1,2,3-propanetriol, 1,2,3-trihydroxypropane, glyceritol, and glycyl alcohol is a colorless, odorless, hygroscopic, and sweet-tasting viscous liquid. Glycerol is a sugar alcohol and has three hydrophilic alcoholic hydroxyl groups (OH-) that are responsible for its solubility in water.
dOGHAIR said:I had the pleasure of attending my first beer fest the other week and it was an "on wood" theme. Apparently the first all wood aged beerfest.
The north coast old stock was incredible.
PacMan is most certainly an ale yeast. It has "high attenuation" and "very high flocculation." I'm sure you could substitute PacMan for any fairly clean ale yeast.2nd Street Brewery said:Well reading this thread was time consumingI was thinking of brewing monday, Was planning a chocolate stout. Went to the beer fridge to get the English Ale yeast I had washed but guess what? I have a lager, a pilsner, a cali ale and pacman but no ale yeast
. I knew Rogue did a stout so I thought I might use the pacman. Does anyone think I will have any issues with doing a Young's Double chocolate stout with Pacman? It calls for Wyeast 1318 but I don't know what Pacmans atten and floc is.
8string said:Made a Dead Guy last night. Unfortunately I brewed on a whim and didn't make a starter. I smacked the pack about 1 PM and pitched at midnight. The pack had swelled up nicely. By this morning it's barely bubbling. I've been aerating (shaking) occasionally throughout the morning and I hope it will get going soon. Some yeast is clumping on the top. I guess I should get a diffusion stone. Or is shaking vigorously still a viable option for the minimalist homebrewer? ( I just spent a bunch to make the jump to AG and still need to buy a grain mill and scale)
If it doesn't start up soon, should I add some nutrient?
Will a cheap aquarium pump work with a diffusion stone for aerating?
Thanks
I was just at Rogue this weekend, one of the fermenters we walked by was blowing off into a 50gal garbage can, krusen was going everywhere and the damn thing was bubbling like a fire hose. Pacman yeast is agressive stuff I think I'll be harvesting off a juniper pale ale tonight.![]()
I was just at Rogue this weekend, one of the fermenters we walked by was blowing off into a 50gal garbage can, krusen was going everywhere and the damn thing was bubbling like a fire hose. Pacman yeast is agressive stuff I think I'll be harvesting off a juniper pale ale tonight.![]()
My LHBS had it in stock about a month ago. are you not able to find any?
Originally posted by farmbrewernw
Pacman yeast is agressive stuff I think I'll be harvesting off a juniper pale ale tonight.
Racked my barleywine to 2nd last night. Got a FULL gallon BUM-JUG COMPLETELY FULL of ROGUE PACMAN yeast!!! I am almost more excited about that than the beer in the 2nd... LOL!!!!go figure... hehehhe
It isn't generally recommended to harvest yeast from a really high alcohol beer. The yeasties will be all partied out (a lot of that yeast cake will be dead yeast that will never do anything for you.) That said, the yeast you get that are still living will be some alcohol tolerant sons-of-*******.
From my understanding it's best to go from low alcohol batches to high alcohol batches if you're reusing yeast cakes and then retiring the hard working yeast after the high alcohol batches.