I think whale brisket is called blubber.
I managed to make some multiple times... But they were never PINYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!!!!!!!!always eluded me, made one once by accident...
I'll look into it. I've tried wyeast 1214 and 3787 and white labs abbey 550 yeasts. Wasnt happy with how any of the beers turned out so assumed it was something I was doing wrong. Which I'm sure it is. I'm going to try again this winter for next fall drinking. If that fails, I'm resorting to self flaggelation.duffy, not trying to fix your beer but do have a helpful tip for getting Belgian beers dry with awesome mouth feel.
THE YEAST BAY BELGIAN DRY YEAST.
It is diastaticus and will take some grists down to 1.002. I have a RIS that is 1.134 OG and finishes at 1.019. My triples finish at 1.002.
As for my whale it was IPA,just to end up with what I envisioned, i'ts happened with these Kveik strains. Now my only whale is brisket!
Blaspheme!!!!You've got to sous vide your brisket.
I have a pretty well received strong rye saison I brew every so often. Its not my favorite saison I brew (that title goes to my Nelson sauvin hopped standard saison). But if you want to see the recipe, let me know.Here is a Rye Porter recipe I devised and made last year, with Tucson Water by the way. It has 3.3% Special B.
Maybe not white whales for me either, but I'm interested in using rye malt, and in saisons, fruited sours, and I want to make a decent IPA.
Blaspheme!!!!
Can’t knock it until you’ve tried it. Totally untraditional, but melt-in-your-mouth good.Blaspheme!!!!
Truth^^^Ayinger Hell vom holzfass
The beer you always wanted to brew or to perfect but was never able to. The one that got away. The little ****er that messes with you til you can't sleep at night.
Ok, not that intense. But you get the idea.
(I'm not intending this to be a "help me fix my beer" type of thread)
For me, its a Belgian Quad (Strong Dark Ale). I've tried to brew one 5 times now and each time it's been, well, unsatisfactory. Too thin. Too bland. Too sweet. Too hot. For some reason, I can't figure that puppy out.
Just curious to hear other people's heartaches
Yes! I'd like to see both those recipes. I am bottle conditioning a saison which has some rye and some wheat malt, with Wyeast 3724 yeast.I have a pretty well received strong rye saison I brew every so often. Its not my favorite saison I brew (that title goes to my Nelson sauvin hopped standard saison). But if you want to see the recipe, let me know.
I've never shared a recipe this way, so let me know if it works.Yes! I'd like to see both those recipes. I am bottle conditioning a saison which has some rye and some wheat malt, with Wyeast 3724 yeast.
Works like a charm!I've never shared a recipe this way, so let me know if it works.
Strong Rye Saison:
https://beersmithrecipes.com/viewrecipe/2061224Nelson Sauvin Saison:
https://beersmithrecipes.com/viewrecipe/2137802
For the Pilsner Urquell clone, this recipe has the decoction amounts and times: pilsner urquell national award winning clone.Clones for two of my favorite beers...
- Fuller's London Pride - followed the recipe exactly per the "Can You Brew It" podcast but the marmalade element of the bottled version never appears. Gonna try A09 Pub Ale yeast next as somewhere I read that while 002/1968 is a Fuller's strain, it is not what they use for ESB/Pride/Chiswick and A09 is.
- Pilsner Urquell - followed Morebeer's article for recipe, hop rates, and boil schedule, and mash temps. Close last time, but my beer was a little weak on the malty finish. What I can't find is the decoction boil times which may be the difference. Also, while I have been using WLP800, from articles I have read on genetic origin, this is an ale yeast and is not the actual H strain used by Pilsner Urquell. Wyeast 2001 is the actual H strain, but it is often difficult to find.
Yeah those are 2 tough ones. What I do know about London Pride (and just about every other beer Fuller’s makes) is they make it by Parti-gyle method. Basically, they make 3 or more different beers from one giant mash. They collect runnings of different gravities and they blend them together.Clones for two of my favorite beers...
- Fuller's London Pride - followed the recipe exactly per the "Can You Brew It" podcast but the marmalade element of the bottled version never appears. Gonna try A09 Pub Ale yeast next as somewhere I read that while 002/1968 is a Fuller's strain, it is not what they use for ESB/Pride/Chiswick and A09 is.
- Pilsner Urquell - followed Morebeer's article for recipe, hop rates, and boil schedule, and mash temps. Close last time, but my beer was a little weak on the malty finish. What I can't find is the decoction boil times which may be the difference. Also, while I have been using WLP800, from articles I have read on genetic origin, this is an ale yeast and is not the actual H strain used by Pilsner Urquell. Wyeast 2001 is the actual H strain, but it is often difficult to find.
Ayinger Hell vom holzfass
Ditto your notion of A09 being the London Pride yeast. Downed me a few pints of Pride in Olde London Towne over the years, and it was a perennial favorite. A09 will definitely give you the marmalade. I recently did a Jai Alai knockoff using A09, and the orange & marmalade were quite prominent. It's a very nice yeast.Clones for two of my favorite beers...
- Fuller's London Pride - followed the recipe exactly per the "Can You Brew It" podcast but the marmalade element of the bottled version never appears. Gonna try A09 Pub Ale yeast next as somewhere I read that while 002/1968 is a Fuller's strain, it is not what they use for ESB/Pride/Chiswick and A09 is.
- Pilsner Urquell - followed Morebeer's article for recipe, hop rates, and boil schedule, and mash temps. Close last time, but my beer was a little weak on the malty finish. What I can't find is the decoction boil times which may be the difference. Also, while I have been using WLP800, from articles I have read on genetic origin, this is an ale yeast and is not the actual H strain used by Pilsner Urquell. Wyeast 2001 is the actual H strain, but it is often difficult to find.