So I did a bit of research last night.
You can use Wine yeast in beer brewing and it can make some very nice flavours in your beer.
White wine strains giving you apple and pear or tropical/citrus flavours
Red wine yeast giving you cherry or berry flavours
There are a few things you need to be aware of
1. Wine yeast is not good at converting maltose so if using wine yeast on its own it will not make a dry beer. However you can use it an enzyme like convertase or Fungal ñ-amylase which will convert the maltose to convertable sugar. Problem with this is that the FG can get down to zero so it is recommended to split the ferment into 2 batches and do one with an enzyme and one without and then combine them before bottling.
2. Some wine Yeasts can produce flavours that you might not want in a beer Phenolic Off Flavors or POF so what you want is a POF negative yeast.
3. Some yeasts don't interact well with others, apparently there are three classes of yeast (competitive factors) Killer, neutral or susceptible. Almost all beer brewing yeasts are susceptible meaning they can work with other susceptible yeasts but will stop fermenting if mixed with a killer yeast. Unfortunately a lot of wine yeasts are Killers. So if mixing the best plan is to let the Beer yeast finish fermenting and then add the Wine yeast for a secondary ferment. Apparently Killer yeasts have developed a defence mechanism that releases a protein that inhibits other yeasts.
Here are some POF negative Wine Yeast strains that I found details on ( these are all produced by
http://www.lallemand.com/ )
71b (susceptible)
Ec1118 (champagne) (killer)
K1v1116 (killer)
Gre (killer)
Bm45 (killer)
L2226 (killer)
so 71b could potentially be put in near the start of a ferment with a beer yeast.
Oh and the reason Champagne yeast is so popular is that it has a very neutral Flavour wise, it is extremely hardy and it works well at high alcohol levels so it helps make a really dry beer without changing the flavour too much.
Most of this information I got from this pod cast on the brewing network
http://www.thebrewingnetwork.com/post1888/ over 2 hours long but quite interesting once they stop talking about guns (Americans
)
I think if I do this I will just add some wine yeast to a secondary after primary fermentation is complete.
- Update -
apparently Lalvin K1-V1116 wine yeast can convert maltose but its a killer so dont mix.