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Wyeast 3203 - PC de Bom Sour Blend impressions

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Just opened a tester 12 oz of my second generation. It's only been in the bottle two weeks, so it's still a little flat. It's not as tart as the samples led me to believe, also sweeter than expected. Reminds me of a lighter duchesse de bourgne.
 
Anyone done a thrid generation with De Bom? I know the second generation soured much faster. I am about to bottle that one.

I am thinking about adding some sach to the slurry so that the lacto does not take off so fast but am not sure.

Anyone?
 
I've gone 3rd generation. I don't think you need to add sach, there is no pedio so I think even if you end up with more lacto the souring will stop at 3.1.
 
Just to be clear:

Gen 1 was pitched from wyeast smack pack

Gen 2 was pitched from fully fermented out Gen 1 beer

Gen 3 was pitched from Krausen yeast plus about 1L of active fermenting Gen 2, about a week in to Gen 2's ferment.

So I call that gen 3 but IDK. The point is that it seems robust to changes in % of the original strains of bugs.
 
Just pitched a pack of De Bom into a Saison wort. Going to let it sour for a few days before pitching 3711. Hoping to add a little complexity to 3711 for a quick turnaround Saison.
 
Brewed a sour with de Bom in Mid-October and it is just starting to develop good sourness. The Brett character (barnyard, horse blanket, etc) was noticeable after a month or so, and there was a mild tartness early on. I will probably end up sitting on this batch until at least the 8 month mark before thinking about packaging.
 
I believe that I am at the 8 month mark now. I added some cherry concentrate to one (concentrated tart cherry juice 1qt) of two carboys a couple months back. Ready to bottle. I have six sour carboys ready to bottle, two that need more time, and two 10 gallon fermenters to rack. All Sour beer, but no time to do all that bottling!!
 
I believe that I am at the 8 month mark now. I added some cherry concentrate to one (concentrated tart cherry juice 1qt) of two carboys a couple months back. Ready to bottle. I have six sour carboys ready to bottle, two that need more time, and two 10 gallon fermenters to rack. All Sour beer, but no time to do all that bottling!!

Thats alot of Sour beer! good work though
 
I love De Bom!. I just hope they re release it in 2015 in case I need a back up to the stuff I've been running train with right now.
 
My de Bom experience:

Brewed up a variation on the "Provision Brown Ale" from the Wild Brews book last November, roughly 67% Pilsner, then equal parts caramunich, crystal 20L, and flaked corn. Step mash 122-145-162. IBU's around 20. Overshot my gravity a bit and started out at 1.080 OG.

Tasted it recently and it has a wonderful barnyard, earthy aroma mixed with some dark fruit maltiness. Really nice aroma and leathery funk. Tartness is very low, however. pH 4.13. I'm not sure if this is due to my IBU level or the fact I did not ferment it warm enough at the start. SG 1.010 which puts this approaching the limits of alcohol tolerance and attenuation level given by Wyeast.

I will probably put this into secondary soon and see if it goes any lower or I get any more acidity. If not, I will add some sour/tart cherry concentrate and turn this into a strong kriek-type "imperial" oud bruin.

I am a bit disappointed by the lack of sourness/tartness. I'm hoping that will increase in a second gen pitch. I will also go for less IBU's and increase ferm temp for a longer period to start to try and stimulate the lacto.
 
A couple of things come to mind. The IBU's are too high. Wyeast recommends. less than 15 . The gravity is high and your temps were not high enough.

I have used it a few times and here is what I found. First generation did not get real sour, but a very nice tartness at about .3 months. . The second generation I kept the hops down to 10IBU's and fermented at 85. much more sour, sooner. Third gen is fermenting now but it is even more sour. at only two months.
 
I added dregs from a number of sour beers and my second generation is nice and tart. Generation 3 is still aging (haven't had time to bottle it up), but samples seem to indicate it is even more sour. I am debating making a light saison with 3711, pitch some brett and leave it for 3-5 months and then blend to even out the sourness.
 
My Flanders red with the de bom took silver in the first round of the Denver regional of nhc. Brewed back in October. Have taken this yeast to 5 generations, gets faster with each generation, pretty consistent too.
 
I wasnt too impressed with this yeast. Way too lacto forward and ended up having to add more bugs and then also blend when bottling. I bottled 2 gallons straight to see the how it turns out, but really was not that happy with this yeast.
 
It has been the most consistent souring method I've seen. It's a clean sour too, so I may start using pitches of it for other beers that I just want a touch of sour in.
 
Sounds like I had poor luck with mine. It didnt turn out terrible, but certainly isnt something I would try to brew again at this point.
 
Just as an addendum to this thread, 3203 is no longer mentioned on the Wyeast website, so it looks like it was a one-off in 2014 that won't be repeated...
 
The bacteria and yeast colony I use for sours started off with de bom, so I likely still have some of it alive in there. Haven't pitched a new beer into it since Harvey though, but I think the bugs should still be alive.
 

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