This is a new one for me, but it's been around for a while.
In 2005 a paper was written by Grady Hull, affiliated with New Belgium Brewery, testing the addition of very small amounts of olive oil to
promote yeast growth.
https://pdfslide.net/download/link/hull-olive-oil-thesis
This is a new test of the idea:
http://brulosophy.com/2020/01/27/impact-of-using-olive-oil-as-an- alternative-to-wort-aeration-exbeeriment-results/
https://tinyurl.com/vp236bx
Surprisingly, both found notable effects in faster and more vigorous fermentation, without a negative effect on flavor.
The amount of olive oil is very small -- the New Belgium experiment went
no higher than 1 mg per 25 billion cells of yeast. The home brewer
experiment pushed it all the way up to 8 ml for a dose of yeast.
Neither seemed to add enough fat to the beer to effect foam, although it seems smart to use the least amount possible. Measuring out that small
of an amount of oil seems like it would be a challenge -- it may be
possible to make a rough estimate by taking a gram of oil, let it spread
it out over a flat surface, measure the area of the surface, and then
use that to get a rough idea of how much might coat the tip of a butter knife.
For everyday brewing it is probably not worthwhile, but for yeasts which sometimes have stuck fermentations it might be something to try.
This is a new one for me, but it's been around for a while.
In 2005 a paper was written by Grady Hull, affiliated with New Belgium Brewery, testing the addition of very small amounts of olive oil to
promote yeast growth.
https://pdfslide.net/download/link/hull-olive-oil-thesis
This is a new test of the idea:
http://brulosophy.com/2020/01/27/impact-of-using-olive-oil-as-an- alternative-to-wort-aeration-exbeeriment-results/
https://tinyurl.com/vp236bx
Surprisingly, both found notable effects in faster and more vigorous fermentation, without a negative effect on flavor.
The amount of olive oil is very small -- the New Belgium experiment went
no higher than 1 mg per 25 billion cells of yeast. The home brewer experiment pushed it all the way up to 8 ml for a dose of yeast.
Neither seemed to add enough fat to the beer to effect foam, although it seems smart to use the least amount possible. Measuring out that small
of an amount of oil seems like it would be a challenge -- it may be
possible to make a rough estimate by taking a gram of oil, let it spread
it out over a flat surface, measure the area of the surface, and then
use that to get a rough idea of how much might coat the tip of a butter knife.
For everyday brewing it is probably not worthwhile, but for yeasts which sometimes have stuck fermentations it might be something to try.
On Wednesday, January 29, 2020 at 8:44:00 AM UTC-8, Baloonon wrote:
For everyday brewing it is probably not worthwhile, but for yeasts
which sometimes have stuck fermentations it might be something to
try.
I did something no other homebrewer has done. I actually contacted
Grady about this. He said he had never tested it for propagation, only storage. Even then it didn't work well. The whole story is in my
book Experimental Homebrewing.
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