jceg316
Landlord.
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2014
- Messages
- 2,811
- Reaction score
- 1,161
I used to brew exclusively with kveik and made a range of really good beers with it, sours, goses, pales, pseudo lagers mostly. Then I started to get this really weird flavour in beers, and for almost a year all my batches were coming out bad. I thought I had an unmovable infection and wrote a post or two on here and other places looking for help. I took a break from brewing, but when I came back switched to iodine instead of starsan, boiled a lot of what I could etc. and kept recipes simple using dried yeast like US05, Philly Sour, MJ yeasts and my beers were coming out great again. Bought some liquid yeasts and the beers were still good. Then I went back to kveik...
My thoughts:
Why it's a lacto infection: I ferment the kveiks at 30°C+ which is the optimum temperature for lactobacillus.
Why it's not: It hasn't infected all kveiks fermented at that temperature, and whilst lactobacillus thrives at 30-35C, it still grows at 20C and this flavour is not in my other beers. It doesn't come out over time either.
It could be kveik specifically: The pattern seems to be reusing kveik, or using old kveik. Just like using regular yeast past its prime will throw out some off flavours, maybe kveik does the same in not treated right? My Skare batch has come out well, but maybe that yeast was still in a good condition and fermenting cool didn't stress it out.
There's a lot of anecdotal evidence on how much of a powerhouse kveik yeasts are, but there's still little known about it's limits scientifically speaking. I haven't read much about it recently, but there was little information on how different the yeast actually is in these extreme use cases from scientific research. Maybe this has changed recently and I need to read up some new articles.
Why it's not: I've not read anything like this elsewhere, but as mentioned it could be because most information is colloquial. I have read that some people don't like the taste of any kveik as it has a "weird flavour" (maybe it's a gene thing like with coriander), but some has tasted great to me.
Would be good to hear your thoughts and if anyone else has experienced this
- Omega Hornindal: first use was good. Saved it and used again, came out well. Third use I got that bad flavour again so thoroughly cleaned my kit.
- Opshaug flakes bought from an Ebay seller and had been sitting in my freezer for months: I made a starter and the beer came out well. Second use I got that bad flavour.
- Ebbegarden flakes from same Ebay seller sitting in my freezer for 2-3 months: tastes awful on first beer.
- Skare flakes from same Ebay seller: Bought same time as Ebbegarden, fermented at 21°C and seems to be clean.
My thoughts:
Why it's a lacto infection: I ferment the kveiks at 30°C+ which is the optimum temperature for lactobacillus.
Why it's not: It hasn't infected all kveiks fermented at that temperature, and whilst lactobacillus thrives at 30-35C, it still grows at 20C and this flavour is not in my other beers. It doesn't come out over time either.
It could be kveik specifically: The pattern seems to be reusing kveik, or using old kveik. Just like using regular yeast past its prime will throw out some off flavours, maybe kveik does the same in not treated right? My Skare batch has come out well, but maybe that yeast was still in a good condition and fermenting cool didn't stress it out.
There's a lot of anecdotal evidence on how much of a powerhouse kveik yeasts are, but there's still little known about it's limits scientifically speaking. I haven't read much about it recently, but there was little information on how different the yeast actually is in these extreme use cases from scientific research. Maybe this has changed recently and I need to read up some new articles.
Why it's not: I've not read anything like this elsewhere, but as mentioned it could be because most information is colloquial. I have read that some people don't like the taste of any kveik as it has a "weird flavour" (maybe it's a gene thing like with coriander), but some has tasted great to me.
Would be good to hear your thoughts and if anyone else has experienced this