A Belgian Quad and an IPA are coming off primary end of this week. Next
up for brewing a few days later are a Stout and a Koelsch. Of course the Koelsch needs fresh yeast under this scenario. For the Stout I'd
normally harvest some of the US-05 from the IPA but I have always
wondered, how would a Stout fermented with BE-256 taste?
I'd harvest some of the Belgain Quad trub which was done with BE-256.
The remainder is always turned into bread starter dough, then later a
nice European style bread with a "hop twang". Sometimes a lot of hop.
The reason I ask is that I don't want to ruin a whole 5-gallon batch and
3-4h of work.
On 2019-08-14 12:48, Joerg wrote:
A Belgian Quad and an IPA are coming off primary end of this week.
Next up for brewing a few days later are a Stout and a Koelsch. Of
course the Koelsch needs fresh yeast under this scenario. For the
Stout I'd normally harvest some of the US-05 from the IPA but I have
always wondered, how would a Stout fermented with BE-256 taste?
I'd harvest some of the Belgain Quad trub which was done with BE-256.
The remainder is always turned into bread starter dough, then later a
nice European style bread with a "hop twang". Sometimes a lot of hop.
The reason I ask is that I don't want to ruin a whole 5-gallon batch
and 3-4h of work.
Well, here we are 16h after cool-down and no fermentation activity yet
:-(
If it doesn't start today I might have to pitch a pack of US-05.
Joerg <news@analogconsultants.com> wrote:
On 2019-08-14 12:48, Joerg wrote:
A Belgian Quad and an IPA are coming off primary end of this week.
Next up for brewing a few days later are a Stout and a Koelsch. Of
course the Koelsch needs fresh yeast under this scenario. For the
Stout I'd normally harvest some of the US-05 from the IPA but I have
always wondered, how would a Stout fermented with BE-256 taste?
I'd harvest some of the Belgain Quad trub which was done with BE-256.
The remainder is always turned into bread starter dough, then later a
nice European style bread with a "hop twang". Sometimes a lot of hop.
The reason I ask is that I don't want to ruin a whole 5-gallon batch
and 3-4h of work.
Well, here we are 16h after cool-down and no fermentation activity yet
:-(
If it doesn't start today I might have to pitch a pack of US-05.
I've had yeasts take longer to kick in.
There are US breweries that have "Belgian" stouts but I'm not a huge fan --
I sort of have it in my head that dark beers with Belgian yeasts are better with more caramel and fruit instead of roasted flavors. It may be more of
an issue with personal expectations, though. Longer aging may well mellow
it out.
A Belgian Quad and an IPA are coming off primary end of this week. Next
up for brewing a few days later are a Stout and a Koelsch. Of course the Koelsch needs fresh yeast under this scenario. For the Stout I'd
normally harvest some of the US-05 from the IPA but I have always
wondered, how would a Stout fermented with BE-256 taste?
I'd harvest some of the Belgain Quad trub which was done with BE-256.
The remainder is always turned into bread starter dough, then later a
nice European style bread with a "hop twang". Sometimes a lot of hop.
The reason I ask is that I don't want to ruin a whole 5-gallon batch and
3-4h of work.
Sysop: | DaiTengu |
---|---|
Location: | Appleton, WI |
Users: | 991 |
Nodes: | 10 (1 / 9) |
Uptime: | 133:01:39 |
Calls: | 12,960 |
Calls today: | 2 |
Files: | 186,574 |
Messages: | 3,266,160 |