Brew Books - What's On Your Shelf??

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There's kveik beers and then there's beers made with Kveik yeast. Kveik beers shouldn't be sour, that's usually prompt for the farmhouse brewer to discard their yeast and ask a neighbour for some of theirs. Also, the juniper branches and a small hop addition inhibit the bacteria in contaminated yeast.

From milkthefunk.com.

Yes, I wasn't expecting sour. Interesting that it is the branches of the juniper that has the antibacterial property not the berries. So if I wanted the 'juniper effect' it is branches or make it have a reasonable IBU.
 
Bakers' yeast and Brewers' yeast are both Saccharomyces cerevisiae, albeit adapted and evolved for different purposes

I brewed a Gotlandsdricka with bread yeast and juniper a good few years ago when I first started reading Lars' blog.

The yeast was a poor flocculator, didn't attenuate fully, but had an ester and phenol profile similar to a weizen yeast.

May have to have another go when the juniper in my current garden has grown a bit.

Just read a bit where someone was using French bread yeast and they pitched it at 37c. I suppose it would then ferment at ambient (whatever that is at that time of year in Kirov Oblast, Russia).
 
Useful info here.

Re: the opshaug I could cope with the 2 week wait, sounds like you used it a few times so it must have tasted OK ?

I like the sound of the Lutra, a quick, clean ferment would be nice. From memory (although we tend to drink the zero % stuff most) I think clean would be a good description of Peroni. I'll put it on my shopping list.

athumb..
Yeah I did and it was quite pleasant. I found the Voss gave too much of it;s own character to the beer, even in a stout.
Lutra is available at Malt Miller in both dried and liquid form. I don't see any good reason to pay another £3 to have the liquid. I think there are other labs who have isolated the same strain and sell it under a different name. Kveiks are very resilient yeasts, it seems to me, and once you;ve got one going you should be able to keep it going over a number of brews.
 
I love a good brewing book, but nothing new seems to have come out over the last year or so. Can anyone recommend a recent publication?
Or has everything that needs saying about beer already been said?
 
Just read a bit where someone was using French bread yeast and they pitched it at 37c. I suppose it would then ferment at ambient (whatever that is at that time of year in Kirov Oblast, Russia).
I have to confess that doing no chill and wanting to pitch before going to bed I pitch all my yeast in the 30s. Doesn't seem to bother the little beasties and of course the wort will be down to proper temperatures by the time they're fully active.
 
Whilst not a book it is still technically on the book shelf. These :-

IMG_7039.jpg


Difficult to make out but its a pack of bookmarks. Started off reading the book using a bit of torn off magazine and I thought that perhaps I could show a bit more style. I was close to buy a pack of 20 fancy bookmarks when I spotted these. A pack of 300 blank ones. If you are artistic you can decorate them yourself but they are good for making quick notes - "Page 24, good technique" etc.

Also... they have a hole at one end that you can thread a piece of string or laggy band through so you can use them as re-usable beer labels. Write at the none-hole end for the first brew and when you re-use it cut or tear it off and write the next label at the new far end. You can probably use it 10 times (or twenty if you use both sides. Did I mention I'm from Yorkshire :laugh8:
 
I love a good brewing book, but nothing new seems to have come out over the last year or so. Can anyone recommend a recent publication?
Or has everything that needs saying about beer already been said?

I'm having the same thoughts about beer styles (maybe should start a different thread).

Is there anything new under the sun ?

I did a red lager which I thought would be novel but it wasn't. Then I thought of a black saison, again already done. Lager with ale yeast, beer with lager yeast, yes and yes. The only thing I haven't seen is a pale stout but that might just be because I haven't googled it.:confused.:. Is there anything you can brew that isn't already a thing ?
 
I'm having the same thoughts about beer styles (maybe should start a different thread).

Is there anything new under the sun ?

I did a red lager which I thought would be novel but it wasn't. Then I thought of a black saison, again already done. Lager with ale yeast, beer with lager yeast, yes and yes. The only thing I haven't seen is a pale stout but that might just be because I haven't googled it.:confused.:. Is there anything you can brew that isn't already a thing ?
I'm sure I 've seen pale stout
 
I'm having the same thoughts about beer styles (maybe should start a different thread).

Is there anything new under the sun ?

I did a red lager which I thought would be novel but it wasn't. Then I thought of a black saison, again already done. Lager with ale yeast, beer with lager yeast, yes and yes. The only thing I haven't seen is a pale stout but that might just be because I haven't googled it.:confused.:. Is there anything you can brew that isn't already a thing ?
This is a great idea for a new thread @Twostage. Look at how old standards get trashed. Cloudy beer was always considered bad beer (except for hefeweizen) and now we have beers as thick as a freshly-soiled nappy and much the same smell if the hops are not just right.
I'm waiting for someone to suggest we maximise diacetyl production and produce Butter Beer à la Harry Potter.
 
This is a great idea for a new thread @Twostage. Look at how old standards get trashed. Cloudy beer was always considered bad beer (except for hefeweizen) and now we have beers as thick as a freshly-soiled nappy and much the same smell if the hops are not just right.
I'm waiting for someone to suggest we maximise diacetyl production and produce Butter Beer à la Harry Potter.

Butter beer was another of my "does this exist?". Yes it does and it predates HP by about 400 years. Otherwise it would have been fun inventing it. It's a concoction of beer, cream, butter, cinnamon and anything else you fancy boiled in a pot.
 
I'm having the same thoughts about beer styles (maybe should start a different thread).

Is there anything new under the sun ?

I did a red lager which I thought would be novel but it wasn't. Then I thought of a black saison, again already done. Lager with ale yeast, beer with lager yeast, yes and yes. The only thing I haven't seen is a pale stout but that might just be because I haven't googled it.:confused.:. Is there anything you can brew that isn't already a thing ?
I drank a Pale Stout a couple of weeks ago. A proper historic Pale Stout.
https://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2024/06/old-fort.html
 

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