PaulHilgeman
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2008
- Messages
- 270
- Reaction score
- 7
About 2 weeks ago, I brewed a belgian table beer, about 1.038, about 8oz of Crystal malt in in, and also about 8oz of honey.
The smack-pack alone took that beer down to 1.004 in about 3 days, pretty good performance I thought, gravity samples tasted great, typically belgian, no off flavors, a little dry and tart, but that should be expected with a 1.004 FG!
So the day I transfered it to a keg, I brewed up a BGSA, all base malts, mostly pils with a touch of oats and wheat, 2lbs of sugar in the 5g batch. OG of 1.085
Pitched it right onto the yeast cake at 66 degrees, had krausen in just a few hours, fermentation seemed to go smoothly, and 4 days later (actually less, more like 84 hours), the krausen has fallen and this thing looks like it has consumed the bulk of the sugars. I plan on leaving it in Primary for another two weeks or more to let it really clean up, and I can cool it down to 38 to get things to really start clearing before I keg it.
I will take a gravity sample tonight, but this stuff is crazy, after using 3787 and 3522 for almost every previous belgian fermentation, this stuff works about 4x faster than 3787 and about 2x faster than 3522.
I dont think there really is a problem going so fast, I did a 1.100 Rochefort 10 clone that was simply amazing that went down to 1.015 in 4 days, it was the best belgian beer I have ever brewed. That used Wyeast 1762.
Anyone else had a similar performance with this yeast
The smack-pack alone took that beer down to 1.004 in about 3 days, pretty good performance I thought, gravity samples tasted great, typically belgian, no off flavors, a little dry and tart, but that should be expected with a 1.004 FG!
So the day I transfered it to a keg, I brewed up a BGSA, all base malts, mostly pils with a touch of oats and wheat, 2lbs of sugar in the 5g batch. OG of 1.085
Pitched it right onto the yeast cake at 66 degrees, had krausen in just a few hours, fermentation seemed to go smoothly, and 4 days later (actually less, more like 84 hours), the krausen has fallen and this thing looks like it has consumed the bulk of the sugars. I plan on leaving it in Primary for another two weeks or more to let it really clean up, and I can cool it down to 38 to get things to really start clearing before I keg it.
I will take a gravity sample tonight, but this stuff is crazy, after using 3787 and 3522 for almost every previous belgian fermentation, this stuff works about 4x faster than 3787 and about 2x faster than 3522.
I dont think there really is a problem going so fast, I did a 1.100 Rochefort 10 clone that was simply amazing that went down to 1.015 in 4 days, it was the best belgian beer I have ever brewed. That used Wyeast 1762.
Anyone else had a similar performance with this yeast