chillipickle
Landlord.
Another vote for US -05. a decent krausen within 24 hrs and done by 7 days, clean and crisp finish.Verdant ipa is another solid yeast imo, can be a bit messy with the krausen, but nearly always finishes in 5 or 6 days.
I wouldn't say it suppresses hops to a great extent. I do think US-05 is so widely uses in American styles because it does such a good job of expressing hops. It's a good starting point. But Nottingham is used by a lot of brewers in hop forward styles too, it's a very good all round yeast for English and American beer styles where you don't want much ester flavour. Wilko Gervin and MJ M42 are both Nottingham, I believe, cheaper than Lalbrew Nottingham.ive heard that nottingham can suppress hops a bit?
Hi. Can anyone recommend a good reliable yeast and quantity needed for 23ltr pale ales please?
Thanks for the info, appreciatedI wouldn't say it suppresses hops to a great extent. I do think US-05 is so widely uses in American styles because it does such a good job of expressing hops. It's a good starting point. But Nottingham is used by a lot of brewers in hop forward styles too, it's a very good all round yeast for English and American beer styles where you don't want much ester flavour. Wilko Gervin and MJ M42 are both Nottingham, I believe, cheaper than Lalbrew Nottingham.
There are plenty of options for American pales. US-05, Nottingham, Bry-97, M44, S-04, M36, M42, Munton's Gold. These will all do a good and similar job, and there are CML options too. I have had excellent American pales fermented with S-04, possibly the best way to use S-04. Would be a good option too.
I choose US-05, mostly because my inital recipes suggested it!
I know there's others in the Chico strain I should try: WLP001, Wyeast 1056, OYL-004
...im still a relative newbie.
I have an ipa scheduled for a bit later in the month using nottingham. I like BRY-97 for pale ales and ipas, but right now my cellar is at 52-53f (11ish C) and nottingham works better in that range.My most reliable yeast is Lallamand (or Danstar) Nottingham.
I spend a lot of time on the American Pro Brewer site and funnily enough the most common yeast they use seems to be SO-4. Just something my subconscious seems to pick up that SO-4 crops up a lot. Not sure if it is because of the better flocculation over US-05 or what.
In that case I really wouldn't worry about the other members of the Chico family - there's a slight difference between the 1056/US-05 and WLP001 subgroups, thanks to a mutation in the leucine pathway, but you've got to look for it. (see this post on HBT for more details of relationships within the Chico family). You might want to give BRY-97 (or MJ M44 which seems to be a repacked BRY-97) a go as a slightly more "sticky" version of US-05, but otherwise I wouldn't worry too much about the other Chicos.
Far better to get an idea of the differences between the major yeast groups by splitting 20 litres of the same wort into gallon buckets and fermenting it with different yeasts. Something simple - say 100% pale malt at 1.048, 30 IBU of a clean bittering hop, then 100g of Chinook spread across 10 minute/flameout/whirlpool/dry hop. Ferment one with US-05 or BRY-97/M44 as a clean "baseline", then ferment the second with T-58 to demonstrate how yeast can mess with hop flavour (it turns the grapefruit of Chinook into a more complex lime-y flavour), the third with Belle Saison (or MJ M29 which is repacked Belle) to demonstrate a high-attenuation yeast (be careful to sanitise that bucket extra-carefully afterwards), the fourth with Lallemand Munich Classic as a hefeweizen yeast, and if you've got enough wort left, a fifth with something British - Wyeast 1469, Imperial A09 Pub, harvest from Fuller's 1856 or cask dregs from your local pub, Lallemand Verdant, Windsor, you could do a whole separate split batch just on British yeasts. Oh, and if you've room for a sixth, Lallemand Philly Sour for a sour beer.
You'll get very different beers from that lot, and you'll only be scratching the surface of what you can do with different yeasts. It's no wonder that (the good) pro brewers make such a big deal about their yeast.
They don't have their own laboratory for producing yeast and it is repackaged, the 40 litre of bitter I made and put into separate fermenters one was pitched with SO-4 the other Liberty Bell. Both fermented at 17C ambient so about 18 t0 19C in the fermenter. The SO-4 got out of the blocks a lot quicker and finished far quicker, the krausen was higher in the SO-4 fermenter, probably due to the ferocity of the ferment. Had a taste of both from the fermenter Liberty Bell has a different taste to the more neutral SO-4. Flocculation appears to be about the same.I think that another thread mentioned that Mangrove Jack's don't breed their own yeast and that MJ liberty bell is Just S-04, or a blend of S-04 and something else. I may be wrong though
The general thought seems to be that Liberty Bell doesn't have much in common with S-04, but may be something like a blend of Notty and Windsor.I think that another thread mentioned that Mangrove Jack's don't breed their own yeast and that MJ liberty bell is Just S-04, or a blend of S-04 and something else. I may be wrong though
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