gmc
Active Member
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2020
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Hi all,
I am currently on my 4/5th batch of home brew. I am brewing from kits with the yeast provided but I have decided that my next progression in brewing is going to be learning more about yeast strains and choosing my own while still brewing from kits.
My main problem so far is that I am finding that some of my beers are tasting too yeasty. It is varying a bit from bottle to bottle, even among the same brew. Long periods of chilling before consumption is helping but not solving the issue. My most recent batch has been bottled for 3 weeks and I can visibly see bits of yeast on the surface, as well as some yeast on the inner walls of the bottle, and a big disk of yeast on the bottom along with some less dense yeast at the disk. I was very careful to leave more beer in the bottom of the primary fermenter than previous brews to try to leave more yeast behind, but this does not appear to have helped. I am brewing in the primary, then going to a bottling bucket before bottle conditioning. Primary and bottle conditioning for a minimum of 3 weeks.
I am looking for basic newby oriented advice on what yeasts strains I should be looking at for general purpose, but with the aim to improve floculation rate and reduce the total amount of yeast making it into the bottles and ultimately the beer.
My next batch will be a Festival Pilgrims Hope kit which is a 5% British ale, but in general, I brew UK and US style ales of most styles.
Is there a yeast strain that can cover most of these styles whilst floculating at a high rate?
Thanks for any help you can provide
I am currently on my 4/5th batch of home brew. I am brewing from kits with the yeast provided but I have decided that my next progression in brewing is going to be learning more about yeast strains and choosing my own while still brewing from kits.
My main problem so far is that I am finding that some of my beers are tasting too yeasty. It is varying a bit from bottle to bottle, even among the same brew. Long periods of chilling before consumption is helping but not solving the issue. My most recent batch has been bottled for 3 weeks and I can visibly see bits of yeast on the surface, as well as some yeast on the inner walls of the bottle, and a big disk of yeast on the bottom along with some less dense yeast at the disk. I was very careful to leave more beer in the bottom of the primary fermenter than previous brews to try to leave more yeast behind, but this does not appear to have helped. I am brewing in the primary, then going to a bottling bucket before bottle conditioning. Primary and bottle conditioning for a minimum of 3 weeks.
I am looking for basic newby oriented advice on what yeasts strains I should be looking at for general purpose, but with the aim to improve floculation rate and reduce the total amount of yeast making it into the bottles and ultimately the beer.
My next batch will be a Festival Pilgrims Hope kit which is a 5% British ale, but in general, I brew UK and US style ales of most styles.
Is there a yeast strain that can cover most of these styles whilst floculating at a high rate?
Thanks for any help you can provide