sifty
Landlord.
I've not liked my brews using S-04, they haven't been bad, but have a weird taste until they have conditioned a month or so.
Liberty a good alternative then...?
Liberty a good alternative then...?
It's worth a try; I am very sensitive to the taste that S04 gives a beer. As you say, it eventually conditions out to some extent, but I really don't like it. Liberty Bell, in the other hand, is lovely.Liberty a good alternative then...?
especially the clockwise section from 5 to 9 pmM25 is Hell.
I didn't realise the MJ yeasts have been sequenced, struggling find any evidence of it. If true, I'm quite surprised as I find LB doesn't mute hops like I found SO4 to, although I've not used it in a long time. Then again I'm genetically related to my brother, and he drinks Carling, so anything is possible.
Liberty Bell is my adopted house yeast. I don’t see any issues with clarity and most often the beers I brew with it are clear out of the fermenter. It’s worth saying though that the ales I use LB for are not highly hopped (English bitter, English pales, Mild, Stout) so you might expect them to clear more quickly.So nobody else has found LB reluctant to clear in bitters as I have?
On recent experience, I'd be tempted to go with Verdant as a dry yeast in bitters; I've found that has given me good results in the past, better than LB.
Oh ! As per another thread I do also add White Labs Servomyces to all my brewsI’ve been using mostly MJ yeasts for consistency, most of my brews seem to be fermented quite quickly within 5-7 days. Except M25 empire ale which took around 10x days in a red ale.
*maybe* M36 Liberty Bell is......... US-05. Ponder that.
Now here's my (most probably erroneous) theory.Oh yeah, it could be a blend. Is M36 LB one of those where the dry yeast granules are two different colors? I've heard that reported for one or two of the MJ yeasts.
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