Here you go!Do you have a link to the Dutch HBF thread on this?
Thanks for the Pannepot recipe @Rochefort - much appreciated!
Here you go!Do you have a link to the Dutch HBF thread on this?
Thanks for the Pannepot recipe @Rochefort - much appreciated!
I’m a bit lost there too! I had a notification from that post this morning and there’s still discussion on the topic but it’s much more cordial thank god!Nah, definitely my bad for lighting the touchpaper. Still baffled as to why a discussion about T58 yeast turned so strange though!
Didn't know that about the Belgian Wit.Glazen Toren uses BE-134 for their Saison and Lentebier. They also have lots of BE-256 in their fridge, most likely for the Triple.
As far as I've found these dry yeast have a Belgian Origin
Fermentis WB-06 - related to wlp570 (Duvel)
Lallemand Abbaye - related to wlp500 (Chimay)
Lallemand Belle Saison - related to wlp545 (Val-Dieu)
Lallemand Belgian Wit - could be related to wlp510 (Orval) og wlp530 (Westmalle)
Nothing found on these
Fermentis T-58
Fermentis BE-134
Fermentis BE-256 (most likely English origin)
M29 I would guess is Belle Saison.
T-58 finishes a but sweet for my tooth but is good. S-33 is a fruity English strain.
BE-256 sounds like Rochefort but no evidence for it, it just matches it for stats and flavour descriptions.
This suggests the Wit originates from Bavaria...Glazen Toren uses BE-134 for their Saison and Lentebier. They also have lots of BE-256 in their fridge, most likely for the Triple.
As far as I've found these dry yeast have a Belgian Origin
Fermentis WB-06 - related to wlp570 (Duvel)
Lallemand Abbaye - related to wlp500 (Chimay)
Lallemand Belle Saison - related to wlp545 (Val-Dieu)
Lallemand Belgian Wit - could be related to wlp510 (Orval) og wlp530 (Westmalle)
Nothing found on these
Fermentis T-58
Fermentis BE-134
Fermentis BE-256 (most likely English origin)
This suggests the Wit originates from Bavaria...
https://shop.siebelinstitute.com/munich-wheat-beer-yeast
I have just brewed an XX Bitter "clone" and I used S33. I SWEAR that's the yeast they use. Comparing them side by side, the yeast profile is identical. Did exactly as he has said in his interviews - sprinkled the yeast straight into the wort at 15C. Fermented at 15C. Naturally carbonated (I keg conditioned to 2.8vol) and conditioned for 4 weeks at 15C. Dried out perfectly during conditioning. Liquid yeasts are more hastle than they're worth. The only liquid yeast I hold is a Brett culture that I've harvested from a whole bunch of bottles, stepped up and blended, and that is stored with glycerin in the freezer. I don't see why to bother with buying liquid yeasts when there are so many fantastic dried yeasts on the market.Prompted by another thread on Fermentis' safale T58, I've been thinking a bit about the use of dry yeasts in Belgian beers and by Belgian breweries. There is some suggestion online - quite convincing - that Struise use T58 for Pannepot, and De Ranke use T58 blended with S33 (or maybe another Fermentis strain) for XX Bitter. Are the use of these, and other dry yeast strains more prevalent in Belgian breweries - i.e. micros that won't have their own proprietary strain - than might be obvious? Does anyone have knowledge of other Belgian micros using dry strains like these?
Castle maltings suggets the use of these strains on its webpages: CASTLE MALTING®: Beer and whisky recipes
Now, there is no doubt that the liquid cultures available are very good (I've just used one of the Wyeast strains for a Tripel myself), but I am wondering how much of the snobbery for liquid yeast (and style guidelines) in some discussions perhaps convinces some of the unsuitability of certain yeasts for certain beers (the same might be said for the use of 'candi' sugars against other sugars).
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