I asked them about the option to have yeast shipped another way and to order more ice packs and was told they are going to implement some new things that allow us to choose different services and options.
I just used my starter today, it was in the fridge like 3 days and the yeast was nicely compacted. The spoon left tracks in the cake and the yeast peeled off the bottom. Fresh wort got what was left off the bottom pretty easy, it did not really suspend/dissolve just came free of the bottom. Seem like it would stick to the bottle well.I like how the yeast is clumping, perhaps it means a tight yeast cake in the bottle. Fingers crossed, that is why I'm on this yeast, hopefully it will drop a clear beer.
Wasnt planning on it but sounds like I should make a starter this weekend to proof the yeast ahead of brew day the following weekend...![]()
I pitched yesterday afternoon and I'm getting a very active airlock this morning. I pitched the 75F starter into 80F heavily aerated wort, higher than I wanted, but I was short on ice. Set controller to 68F. I kept half of the 1.5L starter and I must say that it does have a green apple cider odor and taste to it. The starter was on the plate for 24 hours at about 75F. Next time, I will temperature control that to 70F, maybe the higher temperatures are throwing the odor. My vial, by the way, came in looking fine, though I'm sure it saw temperatures in the 80s on its 5 day trip from CA to GA
The good news is that my replacement yeast spent less than 48 hours in transit and was packaged more sturdily (the insulated envelope was in a box this time)Mine shipped on the 19th and arrived on the 26th. Temp was just under 90F. Parts of the icepack were at 95F. I chatted with the Labs before arrival and was offered another vial before I ever asked for one. It went out via FedEx two day yesterday and is scheduled to arrive tomorrow.
My plan is to make a relatively small Centennial Blonde first, and use the yeast from that brew for something bigger and hoppier. A half pound pack of Idaho 7 is calling to me from the fridge...
I pitched yesterday afternoon and I'm getting a very active airlock this morning. I pitched the 75F starter into 80F heavily aerated wort, higher than I wanted, but I was short on ice. Set controller to 68F. I kept half of the 1.5L starter and I must say that it does have a green apple cider odor and taste to it. The starter was on the plate for 24 hours at about 75F. Next time, I will temperature control that to 70F, maybe the higher temperatures are throwing the odor. My vial, by the way, came in looking fine, though I'm sure it saw temperatures in the 80s on its 5 day trip from CA to GA
Sounds like your guys survived the voyage but may have gotten stressed out along the way. If they are pumping out Acetaldehyde it will be hard to get that cleaned up...
The good news is that my replacement yeast spent less than 48 hours in transit and was packaged more sturdily (the insulated envelope was in a box this time)
The bad news is that the yeast temp was still 89F. I am targeting about 5%ABV for this weekend brew and I am wondering if I should just pitch both vials? The batch will be around 4 or 5 gallons.
I stuck my head in the freezer/FC and all I can smell now is yeast. No cider smell at all.
What sort of attenuation should we expect from this yeast? Is everyone fermenting in the 70-75F range suggested on the vial?
My past experience fermenting in the mid 60's, was an attenuation near 80%. It kicks off pretty fast too, at least in my experience.I stuck my head in the freezer/FC and all I can smell now is yeast. No cider smell at all.
What sort of attenuation should we expect from this yeast? Is everyone fermenting in the 70-75F range suggested on the vial?
I hesitate to jump in here as I didn't order the Hansen, and I am a bit of a White Labs loyalist, so take this with a grain of salt.
Clearly their method on this wasn't well thought out or executed given the time of year. That is fair, and it sounds like they're doing the best to do all of you right.
Starter worts even with healthy yeast often smell off. I know you all have made starters in the past, so I won't go too much into that. But I don't believe a yeast mutation would make a yeast produce off flavors for eternity, they tend to adapt to conditions.
So if your yeast ended up in your mailbox at 90F, it shouldn't put off those characteristics at less than that. And perhaps the starter is "stressed" but from what I understand, yeast adapt very quickly. I feel like if you make a healthy starter in proper conditions, and then perhaps build from that, that you will likely have a yeast capable of producing at least close to what is advertised.
We're dealing with living things, and White Labs could have done better for sure. Who else has their range and customer service, though? Maybe someone does and I don't know about it, but I have never been displeased with a White Labs product.
my schedule allows only 15-20 brew days a year,