KraphtBier
Well-Known Member
Heard, oats are out. You are correct, Melanoidin is for color and some mouthfeel. I really enjoy the Smuttynose Farmhouse beer and if I recall, it is quite cloudy. Thats where I got the idea to use the oats.
Has anyone dry hopped a saison with Cascades? I think it might be a good fit.
Saison yeast is really fine and takes a long time to clear from the beer so will provide some of the haze...not to mention rye or the traditional wheat will provide haze so don't worry about losing anything by dropping the oats. You are looking at under 10% rye so you should be fine...4 oz of rice hulls won't hurt anything and is cheap insurance though.
Just curious, what is a long time to clear? My experience with this yeast is after it hits 1.004 to 1.000 the yeast flock like a brick, not your experience with it?
Just curious, what is a long time to clear? My experience with this yeast is after it hits 1.004 to 1.000 the yeast flock like a brick, not your experience with it?
I was going off of starter experience as I always cold crash and decant my starters. Normally my starters fall completely clear in a day, but after two days 3711 (only saison I've used) starters are still hazy. As far as a finished beer, I can't separate the wheat or rye protein haze from yeast so couldn't honestly say what's causing the haze in that situation.
Total noob question: To those who are fermenting with this yeast in the 80-85 range how are you monitoring temps? I just have the stick on fermometers and they only go up to 78.
Right now I'm seeing a little color on the 78 which I would think puts the actual temp around 80-82. I had it lower for the first 24 hours but then let it warm up a bit.
smokinghole said:I'm wondering if decoction mashing or a somewhat turbid mash would slow this beast down a little bit?
Finished up the brew last nite and pitched a 1-liter starter today. I pitched warmer (70ish) this time and plan to let the temperature ramp naturally to about 78. Thanks for all your help folks. Final recipe was as follows
Single Infusion, Light Body, Batch Sparge
Mash @ 152 for 75min (overshot my temp by a few degrees, I was aiming for 150)
O.G.~1.060
33 IBUs
70% Efficiency
10lbs American 2-row
1lb Rye Malt
5.4oz Melanoidin Malt
4.0oz Rice Hulls
4.0oz Light Brown Sugar (added 2 min before flameout)
0.5oz Sorachi Ace 10.6%aa (60 min)
0.5oz Sorachi Ace 10.6%aa (15 min)
Whirlfloc Tablet (15 min)
1.0oz Amarillo 8.2%aa (5 min)
Wyeast 3711 (1 Liter Starter)
Nothing can slow down 3711. All we can do now is worship it on hopes that it will not too devour us when it's time for global domination is at hand.
All hail 3711!!!
Nothing can slow down 3711. All we can do now is worship it on hopes that it will not too devour us when it's time for global domination is at hand.
All hail 3711!!!
I for one welcome our new French overlords. What a delicious world it will be.
My wife's joke was: are they sure it's french yeast; doesn't surrender or go on strike.And possibly smellier![]()
It will ferment fast and finish really low at that temp. (3711 finishes low even with cooler temps). Fermenting higher will definitely produce a lot more sulfur character and can smell pretty bad during fermentation. It will clean up with some conditioning.I'm brewing up a modest gravity saison (1.045) with 3711 this upcoming week. I plan on fermenting it at room temperature (75*F) and doing nothing to hold back the fermentation (no water bath, etc)....
It will ferment fast and finish really low at that temp. (3711 finishes low even with cooler temps). Fermenting higher will definitely produce a lot more sulfur character and can smell pretty bad during fermentation. It will clean up with some conditioning.