YEAST INFORMATION AND TECHNIQUE RESOURCE May 26, 1994 Edited, compiled, annotated and introduced by Patrick Weix ============================================================================= Hi to all fellow homebrewers. This document is meant to be a Yeast FAQ and general yeast information resource. Where possible, I have referenced the original sources. Almost all of this data was plagiarized from somewhere by me or others; however, I have not knowingly used any copyrighted stuff. (I was very careful *not* to check anything for a copyright ;-).) I have altered the focus of some documents to more accurately reflect what I feel to be the interests of the *home*brewer. Some of the information is very basic; some, more technical. I have tried to give a basic introduction to what yeast are, how they affect beer taste, and the proper handling of yeast. Some portions of the following were taken from the Wyeast information circular e-mailed to me by David Adams; the sections pertaining to yeast culturing are adapted from an upcoming book by Dr. Fix. Dr. Fix also provided the section on the proper method of yeast rehydration. Most of the information on the "reputations" of the many yeast strains was collected from the HBD over the years by Doug O'Brien. Many thanks to David Adams, Dr. George Fix, and Doug O'Brien. I would also like to thank Al Korzonas for his helpful suggestions on the characteristics of some of the yeast strains and for his comments and help in clarifying the sections on propagation and culturing; Conn V. Copas for sending me several informative articles clipped from the HBD and rec.crafts.brewing; and Mike Sharp for directing me to information about the Yeast Culture Kit people. Thanks also to John Mcelver who refreshed my memory about the sterilization power of alcohol solutions. Thomas Manteufel wrote me and provided some strain characteristics, provided some references to yeast in past HBD issues, and also had some yeast washing tips. Thanks to Maribeth Raines for the Brewtek yeast lists. Thanks to Jeff Guillet for the ascii formatting; I hope it makes the Faq a little easier to read. Others are referenced next to their contributions (often second hand). Thanks also to the many people who made small suggestions or requests for clarification. My name is Patrick Weix, and I am a graduate student in the Genetics and Development program at UT Southwestern at Dallas. . I hope you find this document useful! N.B. This document is composed of rampant hearsay and rumor. Any attempts to put anything on me or my co-conspirators will be resisted. If all else fails, I will call your boss and ask him why you are reading the HBD at work instead of grinding out the Fitzsimmons contract. What do they pay you for anyway? Don't you have anything better to do?... ============================================================================ LIST OF CONTENTS: ---------------- INTRODUCTION SECTION I: YEAST CHARACTERISTICS ACTIVITY TEMPERATURE ATTENUATION FLOCCULATION pH RANGES ALCOHOL TOLERANCES SMELLS AND TASTES OBTAINING CULTURES AND MISCELLANY WHERE TO LOOK IN THE ARCHIVES FOR MORE INFORMATION SECTION II: YEAST PROFILES PART 1: DRY ALE YEAST (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) PART 2: LIQUID ALE YEAST PART 3: LAGER YEAST (Saccharomyces uvarum) PART 4: WEISSEN, LAMBIC, MEAD, AND BARLEYWINE STYLES SECTION III: YEAST MANAGEMENT PART 1: HYDRATION PROCEDURE FOR DRY YEAST PART 2: PROPAGATION OF YEAST STRAINS PART 3: YEAST WASHING FOR THE HOMEBREWER PART 4: PARALLEL YEAST CULTURES PART 5: SEND YEAST THROUGH THE MAIL PART 6: CULTURING FROM COMMERCIAL BEERS APPENDIX A: WILLIAM'S WYEAST EQUIVALENCIES EPILOGUE: KEEPING THIS RESOURCE CURRENT ============================================================================ INTRODUCTION Yeast are unicellular fungi. Most brewing yeast belong to the genus Saccharomyces. Ale yeast are S. cerevisiae, and lager yeast are S. uvarum (formerly carlsbergerensis, BTW S. carlsbergerensis is listed in some places--for example, the ATCC--as a subspecies of S. cerevisiae). Another type of yeast you may hear mentioned, usually in conjunction with weizens, is S. delbrueckii. Finally, many Lambicophiles want me to say that Brettanomyces sp. are also used in brewing; however, I can't think of anything that somebody somewhere hasn't tried to brew a Lambic with :-)!! You may ask, "If all ale or lager yeast are basically the same species, why all the fuss?" The fuss has to do with strain variation. All dogs are the same species, yet no one will ever mistake a Basset Hound for a Doberman (at least not twice :-). Using different strains can add fun and spice to brewing, especially if you have some idea of the differences. I originally put together this guide to catalogue the different affects of different strains. This information is in Section II. Section I outlines the general characteristics of brewing yeast and tries to answer some of the more frequently asked questions about yeast that seem to cycle onto the HBD. Section III explains how the homebrewer can culture and maintain yeast strains in the safety and comfort of his/her own home. SECTION I: YEAST CHARACTERISTICS ACTIVITY Some yeast strains are more active and vigorous than others. Lager strains in particular do not show as much activity on the surface as many of the ale strains. Most packages provide an adequate quantity of yeast to complete fermentation with varying amounts of lag time depending on strain, freshness, handling, and temperature. If you find it too slow, make a starter as recommended on the package or as listed in Section III. The other main parameter besides the amount of yeast pitched that affects lag time is the proper aeration of the wort. Dissolved oxygen is essential for the initial rapid growth of yeast. Although there has been enough verbiage on the HBD for 2 FAQs on aeration methods (which means that everyone has a favorite method and they all work well enough), I will try to summarize the essentials. 1. Aeration is very important. 2. Wait until the wort is cold before aerating because: a. Why burn yourself with 5 gallons of boiling sugar water? (Can you say "Sterile!," I thought you could!) Very bad! b. Hot aeration can cause oxidation, leading to off flavors. Even worse! 3. How you should aerate your wort depends on your personality and style: a. Low Tech and/or Cheap: Put a cap on the carboy and shake it until you get tired. Make it a tribal dance! Revel in the bond you feel to the original Sumerian brewers; revel in the 20 bucks you saved. b. High Tech AR Gadget Lover: Buy an aquarium air pump including one of the bubbler stones. Sterilize it with your favorite method-- autoclaving is not recommended. Bubble away, confident that the small and uniform size of the bubbles you produce maximize the gas-wort interface resulting in a higher rate of O2 exchange than that of your chintzy brethren or sistren. Besides who wants to look like an idiot dancing around the kitchen clutching a carboy. Especially with your back.... 4. Drink a brew while watching the krausen rise majestically on your latest masterpiece. TEMPERATURE The slow onset of visible signs of fermentation can be improved by starting fermentation at 75 deg.F (24 deg.C) until activity is evident, then moving to your desired fermentation temperature. A few degrees can make a significant difference without adversely affecting flavor. The normal temperatures for ale yeast range from 60-75 deg.F (16-24 deg.C). A few strains ferment well down to 55 deg.F (13 deg.C). 68 deg.F (20 deg.C) is a good average. Lager strains normally ferment from 32-75 deg.F (0-24 deg.C). 50-55 deg.F (10-12 deg.C) is customary for primary fermentation. A slow steady reduction to the desired temperature for secondary fermentation gives the best results. The fermentation rate is closely related to temperature. The lower the temperature, the slower fermentation commences. Fluctuations in temperature such as cooling and warming from night to day can adversely affect yeast performance. ATTENUATION Attenuation refers to the percentage of sugar converted to alcohol. Apparent attenuation of yeast normally ranges from 67-77%. The attenuation is determined by the composition of the wort or juice and the yeast strain used. Each yeast strain ferments different sugars to varying degrees, resulting in higher or lower final gravities. That will affect the residual sweetness and body. Really, it's slightly more complex than that (isn't everything ? :-). There's "apparent attenuation" and "real attenuation". The difference comes about because alcohol has a specific gravity less than 1 (about 0.8). Real attenuation is the percent of sugars converted to alcohol. So, if you had a 10% (by weight) sugar solution (about 1.040), and got 100% real attenuation, the resulting specific gravity would be about 0.991 (corresponding to about 5% alcohol by weight). The apparent attenuation of this brew would be 122%! George Fix published a set of equations relating apparent and real attenuation and alcohol content last year. For example, let A = alcohol content of finished beer in % by wt and RE = real extract of finished beer in deg. Plato. Since A and RE are generally not known to us, additional approximations are needed. The following are due to Balling, and have proven to be reasonable. Let OE and be defined as follows: OE = original extract (measured deg. Plato of wort) AE = apparent extract (measured deg. Plato of finished beer). Then, RE = 0.1808*OE + 0.8192*AE, and A = (OE-RE)/(2.0665-0.010665*OE). The "tricky part" here is the expression of the sugar content in degrees Plato. This is a fancy term for % sugar by weight, and corresponds *roughly* to "degrees gravity" divided by 4. That is, a 1.040 wort has an extract of 10 degrees Plato. He goes on to calculate an example: To take a specific case, first note that from Plato tables an OG of 1.045 is equivalent to OE = 11.25 deg. Plato, while a FG of 1.010 is equivalent to AE = 2.5 deg. Plato. Therefore, RE = 0.1808*11.25 + 0.8192*2.5 = 4.08 deg. Plato, and A = (11.25 - 4.08)/(2.0665 - .010665*11.25) = 3.68 % wt. The apparent attenuation is 75% (from 1.040 to 1.010), the real attenuation is (11.25 - 4.08)/11.25 = 64%. N.B. Most attenuation figures are given in terms of *apparent* attenuation. (Thanks to Chris Pencis quoting Stuart Thomas quoting George Fix). FLOCCULATION Flocculation refers to the tendency of yeast to clump together and settle out of suspension. The primary determinant of how well a strain flocculates appears to be the "stickiness" of the carbohydrates in the cell wall. The degree and type of flocculation varies for different yeasts. Some strains clump into very large flocculate. Some flocculate very little, giving a more granular consistency. Most yeast strains clump and flocculate to a moderate degree. A yeast that is more flocculant will fall out of suspension better. How does that affect the final clarity of your brew? Well, since it will be in the bottle at least a week before you drink it, it really doesn't seem to matter so much. However, it does matter for other characteristics of the beer, namely attenuation and diacetyl. If the yeast settle out too quickly, they may leave some chemical reactions unfinished. Mostly these strains: 1) May not be as attenuative because of shorter contact time with the sugars, 2) May not finish reducing all the diacetyls, leaving a butterscotch flavor. pH RANGES Typical pH range for yeast fermentations begins at about 5.1 and optimally 4.8. The pH of wort is usually about 5, depending on the starting pH of the water and the grains or extracts used. During the course of fermentation the pH reduces to typically 3.9- 4.1 and as low as 3.1 in some wines. pH may be checked using pH paper test strips, which are available at many homebrew shops. ALCOHOL TOLERANCES The alcohol tolerance for most brewing yeast is as least to 8%. Barley wines to 12% can be produced by most ale strains. Pitching rates need to be increased proportionally to higher gravities. Alternately, Champagne and Wine yeast can be used for high gravities sometimes reaching alcohols to 18%. To get the characteristics of particular beer yeast strains in Barley Wines or Imperial Stouts, some brewers start with the desired beer strain, brew to 5-8%, and finish with a champagne or wine yeast. SMELLS AND TASTES Although the principle tastes present in a beer are the result of the malts and hops used, the strain of yeast used can also add important flavors, good and/or bad. Yeast that add little in the way of extra flavors are usually described as having a "clean" taste. These yeast are especially useful for beginners because they permit experimentation with different ingredients without worrying about yeast influence. Yeast produce three main classes of metabolic by-products that affect beer taste: phenols, esters, and diacetyl. Phenols can give a "spicy" or "clove-like" taste, but can also result in mediciny tastes, especially if they react with chlorine in the water to make chlorophenols. Esters can lend a "fruity" taste to beer. Diacetyls can give beer a "butterscotch" or sometimes a "woody" taste. The desirability of any one of these components depends largely on the style of beer being brewed. In addition there are certain by-products in these families that are more noxious than the others. A lot depends on the individual palette and the effect you're aiming for. A final note: some yeast, especially lager yeast during lagering, can produce a "rotten egg" smell. This is the result of hydrogen sulfide production. Although the scent of this bubbling out of the air-lock is enough to make the strongest homebrewmeister blanch, fear not! The good news is that this will usually pass, leaving the beer unaffected. Relax, etc. OBTAINING CULTURES AND MISCELLANY Most of the dry strains are available by mail-order or at your local homebrew store. Wyeast are also widely available (by which I mean, of course, that *my* local store carries a wide selection). The BrewTek strains and the Yeast Culture Kit strains are significantly less available, so the company contact numbers are included as a public service. BrewTek: (800) 8BRE-WTE Yeast Culture Kit Company: (800) 742-2110 Please do not confuse the Yeast Lab numbers with the Yeast Culture Kit Company numbers. Both use strain designations with the form A(le)## or L(ager)##, i.e. A06, L01, but they are *completely* different. Also, a frequently asked question is "how do you pronounce Wyeast?" Well, it's pronounced like "WHY-yeast." WHERE TO LOOK FOR MORE INFORMATION ..In the Digest: (Provided kindly by Thomas Manteufel) Digests 529 and 725 have articles on reviving yeast from bottle conditioned beer. Basically, once you get them started, it is the same as the later stages of propagating from slants. HBD 802 discusses freezing yeast samples. HBD 811 has information from Dr. Fix on the characteristics of several strains. And there is a cornucopia of information for all you closet yeast washers out there, but I have integrated it into Section III, Part 3, YEAST WASHING. For the impatient, the HBDs referenced are 876 and 1157. and on the WWW: A hypertext link is at "http://guraldi.itn.med.umich.edu/Beer/yeast.html". ============================================================================ SECTION II: YEAST PROFILES PART 1: DRY ALE YEAST (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) Coopers Ale Yeast Good to very good reputation. The Coopers is quite fruity fermented at 65F. It's not phenolic at all and all the flavor is a very clean fruitiness. Glenbrew Special Ale Yeast Specially designed for use in "all malt" beers. Contains a special enzyme to obtain extremely low terminal gravities. Doric Ale Yeast Ok to very good reputation. One person reports "reliable, clean finish". Edme Ale Yeast Starts quick. Produces some fruity esters. Attenuative. Good reputation. Lallemand Nottingham Yeast This yeast is remarkable for its high degree of flocculation. It settles out very quickly and firmly. Very good reputation. It is a fast starter with quick fermentation at 62F. It's very clean and only very slightly fruity in the keg, but tastes/smells nutty in the bottled version. Nottingham appears to be relatively attenuative (more so than the Coopers). Lallemand Windsor Yeast Produces a beer which is clean and well balanced. This yeast produces an ale which is estery to both palate and nose with a slight fresh yeast flavor. Very good reputation. Not as quick as the Nottingham. Definite banana smell at racking. Munton-Fison Ale Yeast Starts quick. Produces some fruity esters. Attenuative. Fair to good reputation. It is reported that a phenolic taste is no longer a problem due to some strain changes. Red Star Ale Yeast This brand had a very bad reputation in the past, and for a while production was suspended. A different strain (AHY 43391) was selected by the company and is now being sold as Red Star Ale Yeast. The new strain is much improved! Reports from Dr. Fix, a brewer's yeast consultant, suggest that this is an excellent general purpose ale yeast with a clean taste. Apparent attenuation 76-78%. Whitbread Ale Yeast Fast starter. Distribution switched to Crosby and Baker with a change in the yeast. Very good reputation despite past quality problems. PART 2: LIQUID ALE YEAST Brewtek CL-10 American Microbrewery Ale #1 A smooth, clean, strong fermenting ale yeast that works well down to 56! F. The neutral character of this yeast makes it ideal for Cream Ales and other beers in which you want maintain a clean malt flavor. Brewtek CL-20 American Microbrewery Ale #2 Gives an accentuated, rich and creamy malt profile with generous amounts of diacetyl. Use it in lower gravity beers where the malt character should not be missed or in Strong Ales for a robust character. Brewtek CL-60 North-Eastern Micro Ale Produces a malty, bready, yet clean malt charactar and, interestingly, leaves hop flavors and aromas well intact. This versatile yeast is well suited for many ales including American red and amber styles. Brewtek CL-110 British Microbrewery Ale Provides a complex, oakey, fruity ester profile and slightly under attenuated finish suitable to low and medium gravity British ale styles. Very distinct, this is a great bitter and mild yeast. Brewtek CL-120 British Pale Ale #1 Produces a bold, citrusy character which accentuates mineral and hop flavors. The distinct character of this yeast makes it best suited for use in your classic British Pale Ales or Bitters. Brewtek CL-130 British Pale Ale #2 A smooth, full flavored, well rounded ale yeast. Mildly estery, this yeast is a strong fermenter and highly recommended for strong or spiced ales. This yeast is well rounded and accentuates caramel and other malt nuances. Brewtek CL-150 Britsh Real Ale For those longing for the character of a real pub bitter. This yeast has a complex, woody, almost musty ester profile that charactarizes many real ales. Typically underattenuating, the malt profile is left intact with a mild sweetness in the finish. Brewtek CL-160 British Draft Ale One of our favorite Ale yeasts, gives a full bodied, well rounded flavor with a touch of diacetyl. This yeast has a way of emphasizing malt character like no other yeast we've used. Highly recommended for Porters and Bitters. Brewtek CL-170 Classic British Ale Like CL-160, produces a beautiful draft bitter or Porter. This yeast leaves a complex ale with very British tones and fruit like esters, it also produces a classic Scottish Heavy and plays well in high gravity worts. Brewtek CL-240 Irish Dry Stout A top fermenting yeast which leaves a very recognizable, slightly woody character to Dry Stouts. Has a vinous, almost lactic character which blends exceptionally well with roasted malts. Highly attenuative and a true top fermenter. Brewtek CL-260 Canadian Ale A clean, strong fermenting and well attenuating ale yeast that leaves a pleasant, lightly fruity, complex finish. Well suited for light Canadian Ales as well as fuller flavored Porters and British styles such as Bitter and Pale Ale. Brewtek CL-300 Belgian Ale #1 Produces a truly classic Belgian Ale flavor. Robust and estery with notes of clove and fruit. Recommended for general purpose Belgian ale brewing, it also ferments high gravity worts well. (Note: this in not Chimay!) Brewtek CL-320 Belgian Ale #2 A Flanders style yeast. Makes a terrific strong brown and a good base brew for fruit flavored beers. This strong fermenting yeast attenuates well and produces a fruity, estery malt profile but is a little slow to flocculate. Brewtek CL-340 Belgian Ale #3 Slightly more refined than our CL-300, this yeast also produces a classic Trappist character, with esters of spice and fruit. Mildly phenolic, this is a strong fermenting yeast, well suited to Trappist and other Belgian ales. Brewtek CL-380 Saison A pleasant yeast best used to recreate country French and Belgian Ales as well as Grand Cru styles. This yeast leaves a smooth, full character to the malt with mild yet pleasant esters and flavors reminiscent of apple pie spices. Brewtek CL-400 Old German Ale For traditional Alt Biers, a strong fermenter which leaves a smooth, attenuated, yet mild flavor. Use in your favorite German Ale recipes. Also makes a slightly dry but clean, quenching wheat beer. Brewtek CL-450 K\"olsch (Koelsch) Produces mild sulfur during fermentation which smooths with time into a clean, well attenuated flavor. Mineral and malt characters come through well, with a clean, lightly yeasty flavor and aroma in the finish. Wyeast 1007 German Ale Yeast Ferments dry and crisp leaving a complex yet mild flavor. Produces an extremely rocky head and ferments well down to 55 deg.F (12 deg.C). Flocculation is high and apparent attenuation is 73-77%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 62 deg.F (17 deg.C). A good balance of sweetness and tartness. A very pleasing yeast. Wyeast 1024 Belgian Ale Yeast Banana estery flavor. With both clove-like phenolics and alcohol spice, the Belgian will tell you right away that it's no ordinary yeast. Tartness often develops over time. Ferment warm or with inadequate aeration and you're likely to get a bubblegum-like note. Intended for abbey beers, and works very well for that. And, depending on the wort composition, *lots* of banana notes. Wyeast 1028 London Ale Yeast Rich minerally profile, bold woody slight diacetyl production. Medium flocculation. Apparent attenuation 73-77%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 68 deg.F (20 deg.C). Complex, woody, tart, with strong mineral notes. It produces ales of marvelous complexity and sophistication. This yeast was used for the 1992 B.0.S.S. Challenge 1st place Barleywine, brewed by none other than Brian and Linda North. Wyeast 1056 American/Chico Ale Yeast Ferments dry, finishes soft, smooth and clean, and is very well balanced. Flocculation is low to medium. Apparent attenuation 73-77%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 68 deg.F (20 deg.C). The cleanest of the bunch, but mutation-prone. This is Sierra Nevada's yeast. Probably the best available all-around yeast, this strain can be used for anything, without embarrassment. Wyeast 1056 is reported to be Seibels BRY-96 strain. Wyeast 1084 Irish Ale Yeast Slight residual diacetyl is great for stouts. It is clean smooth, soft and full bodied. Medium flocculation and apparent attenuation of 71-75%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 68 deg.F (20 deg.C). Soft, round, malty; the least attenuative of the Wyeast line. Very nice for any cold-weather ale, at its best in stouts and Scotch ales. Reputed to be the yeast Guinness uses. Wyeast 1087 Wyeast Ale Blend Comes in the new 80 gram (50 liter) packages. Wyeast 1098 British Ale Yeast Ale yeast from Whitbread. Ferments dry and crisp, slightly tart and well balanced. Ferments well down to 55 deg.F (12 deg.C). Medium flocculation, apparent attenuation 73-75%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 70 deg.F (21 deg.C). Tart, crisp, clean. Great in pale ales and bitters, good in porters. Wyeast 1338 European Ale Yeast Ale yeast from Wissenschaftliche in Munich. A full bodied complex strain finishes very malty. Produces a dense rocky head during fermentation. High flocculation, apparent attenuation 67-71%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 70 deg.F (21 deg.C). It's clean and malty, especially well suited to Altbier. Wyeast 1728 Scottish Ale Yeast Rich smoky, peaty character ideally suited for Scottish style ales, smoked beers and high gravity ales. Wyeast 1968 Special London Ale Yeast Highly flocculant ale yeast with rich malty character and balanced fruitiness. High degree of flocculation makes this an excellent strain for cask conditioned ales. Yeast Culture Kit A01 From California. Vendor's suggested uses (VSU): Barley Wine, Brown Ale, Pale Ale, India Pale Ale, Cream Ale, Porter, Stout. Yeast Culture Kit A04 From Oregon. VSU: Dusseldorf Altbier, Kolsch. Yeast Culture Kit A06 From Oregon. VSU: Porter, Stout, Imperial Stout. Yeast Culture Kit A08 From Dorchester, England. VSU: Barley Wine (high residual sweetness). Yeast Culture Kit A13 From Ireland. VSU: Porter, Stout, Imperial Stout. Yeast Culture Kit A15 From England. VSU: Brown Ale, Pale Ale, India Pale Ale, Cream Ale, Bitters and Milds. Yeast Culture Kit A16 From Belgium. VSU: Trappist Ales (Abbeys, Doubles, Tripples). Yeast Culture Kit A17 From London, England. VSU: Brown Ale, Pale Ale, India Pale Ale, Cream Ale, Bitters and Milds. Yeast Culture Kit A34 From Edinburgh, Scotland. VSU: Barley Wines, Scotch Ale, Scottish Bitters, Strong Ale. Yeast Culture Kit A35 From central Belgium. VSU: Belgian Whites. Yeast Culture Kit A36 From Houffalize, Belgium. VSU: Belgian Ales. Yeast Culture Kit A37 From Bavaria, Germany. VSU: Altbier, Kolsch. Yeast Lab A01 Australian Ale This all purpose strain produces a very complex, woody and flavorful beer. Australian origin. Medium attenuation, medium flocculation. Great for Brown ales and Porters. 65-68F. Yeast Lab A02 American Ale This clean strain produces a very fruity aroma, with a soft and smooth flavor when fermented cool. Medium attenuation and low flocculation. This is an all purpose ale yeast. 65-66F. Yeast Lab A03 London Ale Classic Pale Ale strain, very dry. A powdery yeast with a hint of diacetyl and a rich minerally profile, crisp and clean. Medium attenuation and medium flocculation. 65-68F. Yeast Lab A04 British Ale This strain produces a great light bodied ale, excellent for Pale Ales and Brown Ales, with a complex estery flavor. Ferments dry with a sharp finish. Medium attenuation and medium flocculation. 65-68F. Yeast Lab A05 Irish Ale This top fermenting strain is ideal for Stouts and Porters. Slightly acidic, with a hint of butterscotch in the finish, soft and full bodied. High attenuation, high flocculation. 65-68F. Yeast Lab A06 Dusseldorf Ale German Altbier yeast strain finishes with full body, complex flavor and spicy sweetness. Medium attenuation, high flocculation. 65-68F. Yeast Lab A07 Canadian Ale This strain produces a light bodied, clean and flavorful beer, very fruity when fermented cool. High attenuation, high flocculation. Good for light and cream ales. 65-66F. Yeast Lab A08 Trappist Ale This is a typical Belgian strain, producing a malty flavor with a balance of fruity, phenolic overtones when fermented warm. Alcohol tolerant, high attenuation and high flocculation. 64-70F. Yeast Lab A09 English Ale A old English brewery strain, this clean yeast is fairly neutral in character, producing a fruity, soft and estery finish. A vigorous fermenter. 64-66F. PART 3: LAGER YEAST (Saccharomyces uvarum) Dry Lager Yeast: (Generally not recommended--tend to be inconsistent). Liquid Lager Yeast: Much preferred over dry types! Brewtek CL-600 Original Pilsner Leaves a full bodied Lager with a sweet, underattenuated finish and subdued diacetyl character. Use in classic Czechoslovakian Pilsners or any lager you want to emphasize a big, malty palate. Brewtek CL-620 American Megabrewey A smooth yeast with a slightly fruity character when fresh which lagers into a smooth clean tasting beer. Use for your lightest, cleanest Lagers or those in which you want an unobtrusive yeast character. Brewtek CL-630 American Microbrewey Lager A strong fermenter, leaving a clean, full flavored, malty finish. Slightly attenuative, this yeast is a very versatile for most lager styles. Use in all Lager styles you wish to have a clean full flavor. Brewtek CL-650 Old Bavarian Lager Well rounded and malty with a subtle ester complex and citrus undertones. This distinct, flavorful yeast is a great for full flavored, classic German lagers such as Bock, Dunkle and Helles styles. Brewtek CL-660 N. German Lager Exhibits a clean, crisp, traditional Lager character. A strong fermenting and forgiving Lager yeast. This is an excellent yeast for general purpose Lager brewing. Use in German Pilsners, Mexican and Canadian Lagers. Brewtek CL-680 East European Lager Imparts a smooth, rich, almost creamy character, emphasizing a big malt flavor and clean finish. Our choice when brewing lagers in which the malt character should be full and smooth, as in Marzen\Oktoberfests. Brewtek CL-690 California Esteem Use to recreate "California common beers" leaves a slightly estery, well attenuated finish. The character of this yeast is quite distinct, try it in American or robust Porters for a new and unique flavor profile. Wyeast 2007 Pilsen Lager Yeast Specific for pilsner style beers. Ferments dry, crisp, clean and light. Medium flocculation. Apparent attenuation from 71-75%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 52 deg. F (11 deg. C). It is worth mentioning that this yeast strain is reportedly used quite a bit in St. Louis, if you know what I mean ;^). Wyeast 2007 is reported to have the slight apple like flavors that distinguish all AB products. One person reported using this in a steam beer with good results. Wyeast 2035 American Lager Yeast Unlike American pilsner styles. It is bold, complex and woody. Produces slight diacetyl. Medium flocculation, apparent attenuation 73-77%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 50 deg.F (10 deg.C). This yeast allegedly is the on used by August Schell in New Ulm, MN. Wyeast 2035 is reported to have raspberry notes if fermented at 65F. Wyeast 2042 Danish Lager Yeast Rich, yet crisp and dry. Soft, light profile which accentuates hop characteristics. Flocculation is low, apparent attenuation is 73-77%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 48 deg.F (9 deg.C). Wyeast 2112 California Lager Yeast Warm fermenting bottom cropping strain, ferments well to 62 deg.F (17 deg.C) while keeping lager characteristics. Malty profile, highly flocculant, clear brilliantly. Apparent attenuation 72-76%. Allegedly, the Anchor steam yeast. Wyeast 2124 Bohemian Lager Yeast Ferments clean and malty, rich residual maltiness in high gravity pilsners, medium flocculation, apparent attenuation 69-73%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 48 deg.F (9 deg.C). Allegedly, one of the four (?) Pilsner Urquell yeasts, although that is the subject of much dispute. It is the same as Weihensephen 34/70. The source for this is in Brewing Techniques 2nd edition article on Octoberfest Beer, which quotes no less an authority than Dave at Wyeast. Wyeast 2178 Wyeast Lager Blend Comes in the new 80 gram (50 liter) packages. Wyeast 2206 Bavarian Lager Yeast Lager yeast strain used by many German breweries. Rich flavor, full bodied, malty and clean. Medium flocculation, apparent attenuation 73-77%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 48 deg.F (9 deg.C). Wyeast 2206 is good for bocks. It is reported to be a slow starter. Very phenolic at high temps (>65 deg C). Wyeast 2278 Czech Pils Yeast Classic dry finish with rich maltiness. Good choice for pilsners and bock beers. Sulpher produced during fermentation dissipates with conditioning. Wyeast 2308 Munich Lager Yeast Lager yeast #308 from Wissenschaftliche in Munich. One of the first pure yeast available to American home brewers. Sometimes unstable, but smooth soft well rounded and full bodied. Medium flocculation, apparent attenuation 73-77%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 50 deg.F (10 deg.C). One report of an intense off aroma (like home perm solution) with this yeast fermented at 45-50F but it miraculously disappeared after four months aging in the bottle at 40F. Wissenschaftliche #308 is also known as "weisenheimer". It is reported to be complex, prone to diacetyl, and more likely to bring out hop flavor than Wyeast 2206. Wyeast 2565 Kolsh (sic.) Yeast A hybrid of Ale and Lager characteristics. This strain develops excellent maltiness with subdued fruitiness, with a crisp finish. Ferments well at moderate temperatures. Yeast Culture Kit L09 From Bavaria, Germany. VSU: American Dark Lager, American Lager, Bavarian Dark, Doppelbock, Dortmund/Export, Eisbock, German Bock, German Lagers, German Schwarzbier, Hellesbock, Munich Helles, Marzen/Octoberfest, Pilsner. (Must be some yeast! :-) Yeast Culture Kit L17 From Pilsen, Czechoslovakia. VSU: American Lagers, Bohemian Pilsner. Yeast Lab L31 Pilsner Lager This classic strain produces a light lager in both flavor and body, fermenting dry and clean. High attenuation and medium flocculation. 50-52F. Yeast Lab L32 Bavarian Lager Use this classic strain for medium bodied lagers and bocks, as well as Vienna and Marzen styles, rich in flavor with a clean, malty sweetness. Medium attenuation and medium flocculation. 50-52F. Yeast Lab L33 Munich Lager German brewing strain for medium bodied lagers and bocks, subtle and complex flavors, smooth and soft, a hint of sulfur when fresh. Medium attenuation and medium flocculation. 48-50F. Yeast Lab L34 St. Louis Lager This strain produces a round, very crisp and clean fruity flavor, with medium body. High attenuation and medium flocculation. Good for American style lagers. 50-52F. Yeast Lab L35 California Lager A California common beer strain, malty with a sweet, woody flavor and subtle fruitiness. Medium attenuation and high flocculation. 64-66F. PART 4: WEISSEN, LAMBIC, MEAD, AND BARLEYWINE STYLES. Brewtek CL-900 Belgian Wheat A top fermenting yeast which produces a soft, bread like flavor and leaves a sweet, mildly estery finish. Lends its delicious Belgian character to any beer, it is best when made with Belgian Pils, and finished with Coriander and orange peel. Brewtek CL-920 German Wheat A true, top fermenting Weizenbier yeast. Intensely Spicy, clovey and phenolic. This yeast is highly attenuative and flocks in large, loose clumps. Use for All Weizen recipes and is particularly good in Wiezenbocks. Brewtek CL-930 German Weiss Milder than our German Wheat #1, our 930 strain, from a famous German yeast bank, still produces the sought after clove and phenol characters but to a lesser degree, with a fuller, earthier character underneath. Brewtek CL-980 American White Ale A smooth wheat beer yeast with an exceptionally round, clean malt flavor. The poor flocculation of this yeast leaves a cloudy "Hefe-Weizen" yet it's smooth flavor makes it an integral part of a true unfiltered wheat beer. Brewtek CL-5200 Brettanomyces lambicus Wild yeast strain associated with the country-side breweries of Belgian. This yeast is an important contributor to the flavor profile of lambic beers and contributes a unique and complex flavor sometimes described as "horsey" or "old leather." A slow-growing yeast which takes several weeks to ferment and develop its unique character. Brewtek CL-5600 Pediococcus damnosus Lactic acid producing bacteria found in lambic beers. This is is a slow-growing bacteria which prefers anaerobic (no oxygen) conditions. It is also common brewery contaminant which produces large amounts of diacetyl. Wyeast 3056 Bavarian Weissen Yeast A 50/50 blend of S. cerevisiae and delbrueckii to produce a south German style wheat beer with cloying sweetness when the beer is fresh. Medium flocculation, apparent attenuation 73-77%. Optimum fermentation temperature: 56 deg.F (13 deg.C). Problematic to get the right flavor, often just produces relatively unattenuated beer, without the clove-like aroma/flavor. Perhaps it's the freshness of the Wyeast #3056 that makes the difference in whether you get the clove-like aroma/flavor or not. Wyeast appears to be selecting a better, "truer" weissen yeast to replace this quirky halfbreed. Wyeast 3068 Wheinstephen Wheat Yeast Saccharomyces delbrukii single strain culture for German wheat beers. This is the better, "truer" weissen yeast that they selected. Initial reports are very positive. Wyeast 3944 Belgian White Beer Yeast. Rich phenolic character for classic Belgian styles including grand cru. Wyeast 3273 Brettanomyces bruxellensis. Belgian lambic style yeast with rich earth odiferous character and acidic finish. Yeast Culture Kit M01 From Bavaria, Germany. VSU: American Wheat?, Dunkel Weizen, German Weizen, Weizenbock. Although the vendor lists American Wheat as a suggested style, it appears to produce too much clove taste for that; however, that does make it excellent for the Bavarian Weizens! After all, it is a Bavarian yeast. Yeast Lab W51 Bavarian Weizen This strain produces a classic German style wheat beer, with moderately high, spicy phenolic overtones reminiscent of cloves. Medium attenuation, moderately flocculant. 66-70F. Evidently much more consistent than Wyeast at producing a true Weizen flavor. Yeast Lab W52 Belgian Wheat Yeast used in the production of Belgian White beer (Wit). This strain provides a soft elegant finish with moderate esters and mild, spicy phenols. 66-70F. Mike Sharp also reports that special lambic cultures (Brettanomyces and Pediococcus) are available from the Yeast Culture Kit Co., even though they were not on the flyer I received. Those interested should call and ask! Be aware that some suppliers may not consider lambic strains to be of wide interest, so ask your favorite supplier. If enough people ask, the supply is bound to increase. Good luck you lambicophiles! I own no stock etc, etc. Mead Yeast Yeast Lab M61 Dry Mead Very alcohol tolerant, ferments dry, fruity and clean, yet leaves a noticeable honey flavor and aroma. 65-70F. Yeast Lab M62 Sweet Mead This strain has slightly reduced alcohol tolerance and produces a very fruity, sweet mead with tremendous honey aromas. 65-70F. Wine Yeast Lallemand Lalvin Wine Yeast S. Bayanus. Good reputation. Red Star Pasteur Champagne Yeast Very attenuative. Good for mead. Good reputation. Popular yeast for Imperial Stouts and Barleywines due to it's high tolerance for alcohol. Some use it by itself, others pitch Pasteur after their chosen beer yeast poops out. Wyeast 3021 Prise de mousse Champagne Yeast Institute Pasteur champagne yeast race bayanus. Crisp and dry, ideal for sparkling and still red, white and fruit wines. Also can be used for Barleywines. Optimum fermentation temperature: 58 deg.F (14 deg.C). Wyeast 3028 Wine Yeast French wine yeast ideally suited for red and white wines which mature rapidly. Enhances the fruity characteristics of most wines. Optimum fermentation temperature: 72 deg.F (22 deg.C). Wyeast 4007 Wine Yeast Malo-lactic culture blend isolated from western Oregon wineries. Includes strains Ey2d and Er1a. Excellent for high acid wines and low pH. Softens wines by converting harsh malic acid to milder lactic acid. Can be added to juice any time after the onset of yeast fermentation when sulfur dioxide is less than 15 ppm. Yeast Culture Kit M06 From Montreal, Canada. VSU: Barley Wine (Champagne). ============================================================================ SECTION III: YEAST MANAGEMENT PART 1: HYDRATION PROCEDURE FOR DRY YEAST a. Use 14 grams of dry yeast (usually 2 packets) per 5 gallons of brew. ***Rigorously*** sterilize everything used in the hydration procedure. This should include boiling and cooling the water for rehydration, so that chlorine is boiled off and the water is sanitized. b. Add the dry yeast to 1/2 cup of water at 90F (32C). Leave for 15 mins. c. Combine the hydrated yeast with 1-2 gallons of wort that is as close to the wort to be fermented as possible. You can take samples from the main wort at the end of the mash/sparge and rapidly boil and cool it. d. Aerate this wort as much as possible under sanitary conditions. e. Don't forget to properly oxygenate the main wort once it is *chilled*. f. Pitch the starter into the main wort once the latter has been chilled to the recommended fermentation temperature (65-68F or 18-20C). Yeast with good viability will result in minimal lags. (The longest experienced in test brews using the new Red Star Ale Yeast was 2 hrs.) An alternative but slightly sub-optimal method is to cool the yeast-in- water from "b" to room temperature. Once the wort has been chilled and aerated (shaking the carboy works well), pitch the yeast. Stir or invert the carboy to disperse the yeast. Put in the blow-off tube or fermentation lock. The two most essential things are to: 1. Sanitize everything in sight. 2. Aerate your wort to insure rapid initial yeast growth--your best defense against secondary infection. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 2: PROPAGATION OF YEAST STRAINS or HOW TO HAVE YOUR VERY OWN YEAST RANCH! I am deeply indebted to George Fix for both giving me these chapters and letting me alter and condense them for the homebrewer. His support was an essential impetus for getting this FAQ off the ground. A. General Comments There is no single item as important as the selection of a yeast strain, or if appropriate strains, to be used in commercial brewing. The same applies to homebrewing. Sensory characteristics---taste and smell---will normally determine the type of yeast that is appropriate to any particular beer formulation. This section contains the necessary procedures for achieving self-sufficiency in pitching yeast. The part treated in this section is often called the Hansen pure culture system. The heart of this system is the so-called "yeast slant". It is a test tube containing a solidified media sloped at an angle. Often Petri dishes are used, but the media is level, and hence the term "slant" is not always appropriate. In any case, yeast cells are streaked on the surface of the solid media. When refrigerated, these slants will keep at least 3-4 months before they have to be recultured. Yeast are taken from the slants, and built up so there is enough to pitch a full batch. The system also contains procedures for doing the exact opposite, i.e., adding yeast to slants for storage and future use. B. Equipment The equipment needs for operating a pure culture system with slants are rather modest. The following are the major items. 1. Refrigerator. This is needed for slant and media storage. 2. Autoclave or pressure cooker. This will be needed to sterilize equipment and media for yeast work. A pressure cooker will do, but it should have a pressure gauge attached so that the conditions during sterilization can be controlled. 3. Media. The preferred media for slants is malt extract and agar. These can be obtained from any scientific outlet. Food grade agar is also available from some oriental markets. The flaked form is easier to work with. 4. Misc. A number of minor items will also be needed. These include inoculation loops, glassware, petri dishes, and test tubes. C. Propagation of Yeast This process consists of transferring some of the yeast on slants to a small flask or jar containing wort, then building this up until there is enough to pitch a full brew. The most delicate steps are the initial ones. Experience has shown that the best results are obtained by using full strength hopped wort for propagating yeast. The ideal situation is when the wort used in propagation is identical to the wort that will be used in brewing. Practical experience has also shown that it is best to pitch yeast freshly harvested from slants at the maximum acceptable rate. Anticipating the results in the next section, this for lager yeast amounts to pitching 1 volume of yeast *SOLIDS* for each 250 volumes of wort. Thus, we need 5gal/250 = 0.02gal*128oz/gal = 2.5oz of yeast solids for a 5 gallon batch. Using the estimation that yeast solids are 1/10 the total volume of a yeast culture after the krauesen dies down (i.e. just entering lag phase), that means that one need about 25oz or a little more than 3 cups culture. For ale yeast all of these numbers are reduced by a factor of two, so (3/2) to 2 cups of an ale yeast culture would be sufficient. In the procedure described below new wort is added just after the end of the period of high krauesen, and in particular after the foam starts to recede. The reason for this is to keep the yeast in the aerobic exponential growth mode. This will insure a steady buildup of yeast cells, and thereby minimize the number of wort charges that are required. The importance of taking great care when adding fresh wort can not be overemphasized. To avoid infections not only is it necessary to properly sanitize equipment, but it also important to sterilize necks of vessels and jars by flame or 70% alcohol solutions. The easiest way to flame a jar at home is with a lighter (esp. the ones for pipe-smokers!). Be extremely careful, and don't use both alcohol and a lighter unless you enjoy the smell of burning hair--Eyebrow flambe, Opa! The first four steps described below are done under the cleanest conditions possible using 1000 ml. starter jars. At the end of step (iv) there will invariably be more than enough yeast in each starter jar to pitch a 25 liter brew (about 6 gal); i.e., there will be at least 1/10 liter of yeast solids as can be checked by visual inspection. These numbers are based on the requirement of lager yeast. As will be seen below there will be no harm in producing too much yeast in this procedure since at the end only the correct amount will be added to the fermenter. (i) Preparations: a. Carefully inspect all the slants that are to be propagated. Those which have unusual growth patterns and/or discoloration should be discarded. The ideal is thin white yeast layer on top of the solid media. b. Autoclave the starter jars and the rubber stoppers for the airlocks for 5 mins. at 15 psi. Alternatively, use your favorite chemical sanitizing agent. c. Add 250 ml. (about 8 oz) of wort to each starter jar. Wipe their necks with 70% alcohol solution. After this add the airlocks. d. Pasteurize the wort by adding the starter jars to a water bath at 60C (140F), and hold this temperature for 20 mins. Cool to 18 C (75 F). e. In a clean room with no air movement (turn off fans and air conditioning for at least 15 min to give the dust a chance to settle), place starter jars, yeast slants, inoculation loops, and a 70% alcohol solution in a clean, quiet spot (i.e. lock the door after first insuring that Fido, Fluffy, and Junior are on the other side of it :-) !). (ii) Inoculation: For each jar, start by sterilizing its neck. Then sterilize ("flame") the inoculation loop. Open a slant, quench the loop in clean agar ("sizzle") and use the loop to remove some yeast. Remove the airlock and then add the yeast to the starter jar. Replace the airlock, and then start work on the next jar. (iii) Initial Buildup: a. Place the starter jars in a location where 68F (18C can be held). Resuspend the yeast twice daily by vigorously swirling the jars. 1L Erlenmeyer flasks are excellent for this purpose because they permit vigorous swirling without getting the wort up by the neck and opening. Also good--and more fun to prepare, *Hic* :-) --are 1.5L ex-wine bottles. The wine bottles are also cheaper, even with the wine. But be careful heating them--I have not used them, and I forget who recommended them as an alternative! b. A widely used practice is to discard any starter that is not active within 4 hours. Certainly if some of the starters are active within this period, then the inactive ones should be discarded. In any case, any starter not active within 7 hours should definitely be discarded even if this means they are all discarded. (iv) Second Wort Charge a. When the foam has receded prepare 250ml. of fresh sterile and aerated wort for each starter. b. The new wort is to be added to each starter, and this should be done as cleanly as possible. c. Before pouring the wort into the starters, it is very important to swab the necks of the starter jar and the wort jar with a 70% alcohol solution to prevent contamination or flame them with a lighter. d. It is also desirable to reduce the temperature to a point closer to the temperature that will be used in production if that is lower than 18 C. The temperature should be reduced *slowly*, e.g. few degrees a day. Large shifts in temperature (>10 deg F or >5 deg C) can shock the yeast and cause marked slowing of yeast growth. e. The starters should be swirled at the start and then again after 12 hours. New activity should be seen before 24 hrs. Those which are not active within 36-48 hours should be discarded. f. Increase the volume of wort until you have sufficient volume to pitch. (v) Pitching the Yeast a. At this time you should have a jar with about 500ml (a little more than 2 cups) of yeast for a 5 gal ale batch. I would suggest pitching *just after* the krausen (foam) dies down, the logic being that the yeast have amassed glycogen reserves and are at their healthiest. Some other sources recommend pitching at high krausen, reasoning that the yeast are in the exponential growth phase. Whatever you do, avoid overdilution and keep accurate notes. The total volume will vary with batch size, yeast type, and your personal experience/whim. Remember to keep yeast notes along with your beer notes so that you can learn from experience! b. Clean the outside of the jar with 70% alcohol or weak bleach and allow to dry. c. Pour the yeast slurry carefully into the primary. D. Preparation of New Slants Two steps are needed in the preparation of new slants. The first consists of adding the proper media to test tubes or petri dishes. Once prepared the slants will store well far a very long time when refrigerated, so many can be prepared at one time. The second step consists of inoculating the slants with yeast. For the homebrewer who cannot afford several refrigerators: Please be advised that your refrigerator is a haven for bacteria, mold, and wild yeast. Anyone wishing to store sterile slants in their refrigerator is advised to: 1. Wipe down the slants before storage with ethanol or your favorite sanitizing solution. 2. Seal the slants with parafilm or electrical tape. 3. Keep the slants in a ziplock bag. 4. Wipe down the bag with ethanol or your favorite sanitizing solution before opening. (i) The media consists of dry malt extract and agar. As a general rule 4 tablespoons of malt extract and 1 tablespoon of agar per cup of water will yield 16-18 slants. (ii) Bring the water to a boil, and then stir in the malt extract. Boil for 10 mins. (iii) Remove from heat, and then start stirring in the agar. This will take some effort, but this usually indicates that a good solidification will ultimately be achieved. If your slants "sweat" too much, you may want to increase the amount of agar you use. Although commercial/scientific agar will vary little, I cannot answer for "food grade" supplies. Gelatin is easier to dissolve, but it sometimes does not give a good solidification. (iv) When the agar is dissolved, the malt/agar solution should be added to the test tubes, filling each to approximately a third of their volume. Add the screw cap, but do not fully tighten. (v) Autoclave the tubes at 15 psi for 15-20 mins. (vi) Allow the tubes to cool. Don't tighten the caps until they are cool or the may *implode*! Although this sounds fun, in reality, flying glass shards and hot agar blobs are a nasty combo. They can be left overnight in the autoclave/pressure-cooker so that they can cool in a sterile environment. Tighten the cap on the tubes, and place the tubes at a 30 degree angle. Allow them to solidify at room temperature. Solidification should become apparent within a few hours. Tubes which are not solid after 24 hrs. should be discarded. (vii) Refrigerate until needed, heeding storage precautions above. Note: Plastic petri dishes cannot be autoclaved, and so alternate procedures are needed for them. You may use the above techniques with *pyrex* petri dishes if you so desire. A common practice is to autoclave the malt/agar solution in small jars or flasks. The agar solution is then poured into the petri dishes. Let the agar cool until the jars are just slightly too hot to handle bare handed--about 50 deg C; the media will start to set around 40 degrees. If the agar is too hot it will warp plastic plates. Swirl it gently to mix but avoid bubbles. A few bubbles around the edges are unimportant, but sometime the whole surface of the plate is bubbles. You can pop the bubbles with the flame of a lighter! Or use a hot inoculation loop. DO NOT use your finger or blow on the plates. Let the poured plates dry 2 or 3 days in a clean quiet room before bagging. Condensation is NORMAL, but you have to deal with it. Once the plates have cooled, TURN THEM OVER (agar side on top) and always incubate them and store them in this position. That way the water vapor wafts into the agar and keeps it humid (slightly) and any condensation that DOES form drops to the lid and can be shaken off. Wipe them down, seal them, and bag them, but leave them at room temperature for 1 week. The bad bugs, if they are there, will be visually apparent at the end of that period and the contaminated plates can be discarded. While Petri dishes are more trouble than test tubes, they do offer the distinct advantage of having more surface area and being easier to store. After the trial period the dishes should be refrigerated. Another Note: If you find *mold* (not wild yeast) contamination to be a persistent problem, Pierre Jelenc suggests: >From 0.5 to 1% sodium propionate in the medium will suppress practically all >molds, without affecting the growth or viability of yeasts. The propionate >can be either added before autoclaving, in which case the medium will turn >cloudy, or as a sterile solution just before pouring the plates, in which >case the medium will stay clear. There is no growth difference in either >case. While not reinheitgebotmaessig, propionate is FDA-approved to >prevent molds on foodstuffs. Thanks Pierre! Inoculation of Slants: (i) Collect a small portion of the yeast to be added to the slants. It goes without saying that one should strictly follow the standard sterilization procedures of all items used to collect this yeast. I usually open a Wyeast (or other brand) pouch, then streak a plate and make a starter at the same time, that way I *know* what I am getting. Feel free to culture from the dregs of your favorite unpastuerized brew or the roof of your favorite Belgian monastery. (ii) With one hand sterilize the inoculation loop (flame or alcohol solution). With the other hand open the cap of a slant. (iii) Dip the loop into the yeast solution, and remove a small amount. (iv) Slowly insert the loop into the tube avoiding contact with either the side or neck of the tube. Streak the yeast over the solid. Only a thin layer is wanted, and one should try to use as much of the surface area as possible. (v) Slowly remove the loop avoiding contact with tube walls or neck. Add the screw cap back on the tube and tighten. (vi) When finished store the tubes at 25 C for one week. Visually inspect all tubes at this time both for yeast growth, and also for any irregularities (see below). Discard those which are not satisfactory. Growth for most Saccharomyces sp. should be evident within 3 days; Lambicophiles culturing Brettanomyces sp. are on their own (actually, these typically grow slower, about a week for the Brett--the species names have been withheld to protect the innocent). Brett may actually be better maintained in liquid culture, with an occasional streaking to check for gross contamination. Again, more rumor and hearsay. (vii) Store the remainder at 2-8 C. After 3-4 mos. of storage, unused tubes should either be discarded or recultured; i.e., propagated by the procedures in Section III.2.c and then put on fresh slants. The best idea is to put production yeast on slants on a regular basis so that reculturing is not necessary. Note: The larger surface area afforded by Petri dishes can be used to advantage in the above procedure. In particular, it useful to streak out yeast in parallel lines which make angles with each other. This allows for a better examination of growth patterns. Petri dishes should be sealed after the 1 week trial period with electrician's tape and refrigerated. How can you tell contaminants (mold and bacteria) from yeast? J. Wyllie (The Coyote) slk6p@cc.usu.edu wrote in rec.crafts.brewing in answer to that question (this has been slightly ammended) *Things to look for: Colors: Creamy off white. (Red, yellow, etc. likely to be contaminants) Textures/Shapes: Mostly roundish, like a demi-sphere. (Fuzzy=bad mold, flat=maybe bad). Light Transmittance: Hold the plate up to the light. Look for colonies which are transluscent. If there are opaque ones (darker) consider them contaminants. You can still pick a pure colony off of a plate with a contaminant elsewhere on the plate (unless you have fuzzy fungal hyphae and spores all over). The main thing is that you want homogeneous growth on the plate. Variation is something to be cautious of. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PART 3: YEAST WASHING FOR THE HOMEBREWER Doug O'Brien forwarded the following to me. As it is a topic that pops up frequently on the HBD, I have included it in this FAQ. Post follows: The following notes were taken from a demonstration given to the Oregon Brew Crew by Dave Logsdon of WYeast Labs, on September 12th. According to Dave, it was important for healthy yeast to be washed free of trub and hop residue so that it could be stored for future use. Dave said that the problem with simply storing the mixed contents from a carboy after fermentation was that the unwanted particulates would suffocate the yeast over a period of time. Most breweries, Dave stressed, use an acid wash; the sterile water wash is much more practical for homebrewers. Objective: To recover yeast from a finished batch of beer for repitching or storage for future brewing. Materials: One primary fermenter after beer has been siphoned off or otherwise removed. Three sanitized 1-quart Mason jars with lids, half full of sterile or boiled water. They should be cooled down, then chilled to refrigerator temperature (ca 38^F). Procedures: 1) Sanitize the opening of the carboy (flame or wipe with chlorine or alcohol). 2) Pour the water from one of the quart jars into the carboy. Swirl the water to agitate the yeast, hop residue and trub from the bottom. 3) Pour contents from the carboy back into the empty jar and replace the cover. 4) Agitate the jar to allow separation of the components. Continue to agitate periodically until obvious separation is noticeable. 5) While the viable yeast remains in suspension, pour off this portion into the second jar. Be careful to leave as much of the hops and trub behind as possible. 6) Agitate the second container to again get as much separation of yeast from particulate matter as possible. Allow contents to rest (about 1/2 hour to 1 hour) then pour off any excess water--and floating hop particles--from the surface. 7) Pour off yeast fraction which suspends above the particulate into the third container.* Store this container up to 1 month refrigerated. Pour off liquid and add wort 2 days before brewing or repitch into a new brew straight away. *It should be noted that in the actual demonstration, Dave eliminated the final step; the yeast in the second jar was essentially clean at this stage and seemingly fine for storage. Thomas Manteufel had the following comments: "...[I]t is best to use yeast from the secondary for this. The Primary yeast is mixed with hops, trub, and other goop. I think this was mentioned in Jeff's original posting in HBD 876, but is in Sheefal's article, same digest. Sheefal also mentions just dumping the slurry (without any washing) from the secondary into bottles and keeping them for months before reusing them. Larry Barello posted additional instructions to Jeff's yeast washing article in HBD 1157." Sounds like good advice to me, yeast ranchers! N.B. that it is the yeast slurry from the *secondary* that Sheefal saves. This has presumably been separated already from the "goop". If you are doing 1 stage ales, you probably should do the whole wash routine. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 4: PARALLEL YEAST CULTURES Rick Cavasin sent me (PW) the following method of "parallel" culturing liquid yeasts. This should work with most packaged liquid yeasts, not just Wyeast. The advantages here for the beginner are that (in addition to saving money) it minimizes the problems of strain drift and contamination that can plague yeast ranchers. As for the savings, it makes liquid yeast almost as cheap as dry yeast! Post follows: Here's the (poor man's) method for stretching the Wyeast that I (Rick) have been using successfully. This method has worked for me with 4 different Wyeast ale strains (Whitbread, Irish, German, European). It's simple and requires no special equipment. Also, it allows several brewers to swap yeasts with each brewer propagating one strain. Briefly, my suggestion consists of converting the original Wyeast package into number of 'copies' stored in beer bottles. i.e. it is a parallel propagation rather than a serial propagation. Step 1: Prepare some starter wort (S.G. = 1.020), see Miller's book for recipe. Basically, you need about 1/2 gallon, but if you make more and can it in mason jars (using standard canning procedures), you will not have to prepare more at later date. Note from PW--Most authorities now recommend using full strength (1.040), hopped wort for starters. Step 2: Place 1/2 gallon or so of starter wort in a suitable container (1 gallon glass jug), pitch (inflated) Wyeast package at correct temp. and fit air lock. This is the 'master' starter. Step 3: Allow to ferment to *completion*. When fermentation has ceased, agitate the 'beer' to suspend all sediment, and very carefully bottle it. You will now have about 6 bottles of very thin beer with a good deal of viable yeast sediment in each bottle. Use each bottle as you would use a package of Wyeast---ie. prepare a starter culture a couple days before brewing. This is facilitated by canning wort when you prepare the master starter. All you need to in that case is pop open a mason jar of wort, dump it into a sanitized bottle/jug of appropriate size, pop open one of your bottle cultures, add it, agitate vigorously, and fit an air lock. All yeast starters are of the same 'generation', i.e. 'twice removed' from the original Wyeast package (as opposed to the usual 'once removed'). I've had the bottled cultures remain viable for more than 6 months. Observe proper sanitation and wort aeration procedures thoughout. Equipment: 1 gallon jug (for 'master' starter) 1.5 liter wine bottle (for subsequent starters) air lock 6 beer bottles, caps and capper Optional equipment: mason jars and canning pot. Cheers, Rick C. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PART 5: SEND YEAST THROUGH THE MAIL! The following technique is reproduced as is from the pages of the HBD; it sounds like an interesting and useful method. Now, if someone could only figure out how to send yeast by e-mail! From: drose@husc.harvard.edu Subject: Mailing Strains .. I thought it worth mentioning that there is a cheaper alternative to agar slants for mailing strains, and it works just as well. We routinely send out laboratory strains on filter paper. Basically, you just put a drop of culture of a ~1 cm square piece of filter paper (probably any absorbent paper would do) an wrap the square in a piece of sterile foil. Then pop it into an envelope and send it off. When it gets to the other side, they drop the paper on a rich media plate, incubate for a day or so, and the yeast grow up. Then you streak for singles on another plate and you're set. I haven't rigorously determined the viability of cells dried on paper, but they are very stable. It works. I can think of two possible disadvantages to this system. First, we use autoclaved paper and foil, and a surprising number of households STILL lack an autoclave. However, while commercial paper is probably not sterile, I imagine it is pretty close; the yeast are going to far outnumber anything else, and when you streak for singles you will get what you want. The foil you could always steam, but probably it would also be close enough to sterile for most people's purposes. The second drawback is that this method requires that you are set up to culture, and to streak for singles in particular. However, while this isn't absolutely necessary in the case of slants, it is certainly advisable. Anyway, just thought I'd throw it out there. Dave Rose Dept. of Cellular and Developmental Biology Harvard U. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PART 6: CULTURING FROM COMMERCIAL BEERS People have reported culturing yeast from the following beers (no doubt many others have been tried---send me info good or bad): GOOD RESULTS: Sierra Nevada Pale Ale (SN uses the same yeast for all their strains) Chimay Orval BAD RESULTS Stoudt's Stout yeast Stoudt's Weizen Two people gave their methods: One (a cautious fellow) always streaks out bottle cultured yeast, picks single colonies, and proceeds as described above. The other (a reckless, devil-may-care sort) pours all but 1" out of two bottles of SNPA, :-), flames the tops of both bottles, swirls the remaining beer and combines it in a jar with starter. Then he caps with an airlock and proceeds as with a regular starter. ============================================================================= APPENDIX A: WILLIAM'S WYEAST EQUIVALENCIES I don't really feel as though this data should be intercalated with the information from the major distributors, especially because William's yeast are packaged for them by Wyeast, but I thought I would include it in case some people found it useful and because someone else had already typed it in (can you say kill and yank?, I thought you could!). Enjoy! Brian (smithey@rmtc.Central.Sun.COM) sent me this missive: Following are the William's yeast "names", catalog item number from the Spring '94 catalog, description, and what Brian believes to be the Wyeast equivalent. ---------------- Abbey Ale - Y23 - An ale yeast able to ferment high gravity ales (up to 1.080 S.G.) leaving the beer with a slightly estery character typical of Belgian Abbey ales. Attenuation: 71-75%, medium flocculation. Wyeast Belgian Ale, #1214 ---------------- Scottish Ale - Y32 - A strain that leaves a rich, almost smoky and peaty character in ales. Ideal for Scottish style ales, smoked beers, and high gravity ales. Attenuation: 69-73%, high flocculation. Wyeast Scottish Ale, #1728 ---------------- California Ale - Y24 - A very neutral yeast which produces a clean-flavored ale, similar to the strain used by several small California brewers. Attenuation: 73-77%, low flocculation. Wyeast American Ale, #1056 ---------------- German Alt - Y18 - German Alt generally has a sweeter, more malty flavor than British ale. Our German Alt yeast ferments beer to a mild, almost sweet flavor, a bit fruity in the aftertaste. Attenuation: 73-77%, high flocculation. This one is a bit puzzling, I would have guessed Wyeast #1338 except for William's 73-77% attenuation; Wyeast 1338 is well known as an unattenuative yeast (the Wyeast profile says 67-71%). I think it's just a mistake in the William's catalog, I'm sticking with #1338. ---------------- Burton Ale - Y21 - A traditional top-fermenting yeast that leaves a soft, almost bready flavor in the finished ale. Attenuation 73-77%, medium flocculation. Wyeast British Ale #1098 ---------------- English Brewery Ale - Y19 - Ferments to a drier finish than Burton Ale, and is fairly alcohol resistant for beer yeast, being able to ferment worts with gravities as high as 1.075. Attenuation: 71-75%, medium flocculation. Wyeast London Ale #1028 ---------------- Cask Ale - Y31 - A new strain that leaves a balanced fruitiness in ales. Ideal for kegged beer, as settles out well. Attenuation: 67-71%, high flocculation. Wyeast Special London / London ESB Ale, #1968 ---------------- Wheat Beer - Y20 - Our Wheat Beer yeast is actually two yeast strains in one pack, an ale strain for traditional beer character and the Delbruckii strain for the spicy, clove-like flavor of authentic wheat beer. This blend provides a taste that has a hint of "wild" flavor while maintaining a traditional beer taste. Attenuation: 73-77%, medium flocculation. Wyeast Bavarian Wheat #3056 ---------------- Delbruckii Wheat - Y27 - The traditional pure wheat beer strain, for a wheat beer with a clove character and sharp, somewhat sour, flavor profile. Attenuation: 73-77%, low flocculation. Wyeast Wheinstephen Wheat #3068 ---------------- German Kolsch - Y28 - An ale strain that leaves a subtle, almost lager-like maltiness in beer, with a trace of fruit overtones. Ideal in Kolsch-style beers and fruit beers. Attenuation: 73-77%, low flocculation. Wyeast Kolsch #2565 ---------------- Czechoslovakian Pils - Y15 - A true pilsner yeast with a dry finish that retains a rich malt character. Attenuation: 70-74%, medium flocculation. Pretty sure this is Wyeast Bohemian Lager #2124. Wyeast now also has Wyeast Czech Pils #2278, but the William's catalog numbers for the "new" Wyeast strains are in the high 20's / low 30's (Scottish = Y32, Cask = Y31, new Wheat = 27, triple packs are 29 and 30); since this strain has a low catalog number (Y15), it's pretty certainly 2124 rather than 2278. ---------------- American Lager - Y17 - Produces a clean lager with minimal added flavor. Attenuation: 71-75%, medium flocculation. This strain is very temperature sensitive, and we do not recommend that you order it in the hot months, from June through September. Wyeast American Lager #2035 ---------------- Bay Area Lager - Y25 - A strain ideal for fermenting lager at warmer (60F - 70F) temperatures. Produces a cleaner beer at warmer temperatures than other lager yeasts. Attenuation: 72-76%, high flocculation. Wyeast California Lager #2112 ---------------- Munich Lager - Y26 - Less spicy in character than our Bavarian Lager, our Munich Lager accentuates the malty flavor of lager. Attenuation: 73-77%, medium flocculation. Wyeast Munich Lager #2308 (Wissenschaftliche #308) ---------------- Bavarian Lager - Y22 - Ferments to a full-flavored, crisp finish without the soft bready flavor of some of the more delicate lager yeasts. Attenuation: 73-77%, medium flocculation. Wyeast Bavarian Lager #2206 ---------------- Triple Pack Ale (80 ml) - Y29 - A blend of 3 ale yeasts in a larger 80 ml pouch pack. The first strain is a rapid starting yeast, the second imparts a classic ale flavor, while the third is a highly flocculant strain which clears the beer exceptionally well. Attenuation: 71-75%, high flocculation. Wyeast #1087 ---------------- Triple Pack Lager (80 ml) - Y30 - Like our Triple Pack Ale above, Triple Pack Lager combines three strains for a quick start, rounded lager flavor, and fast settling. Attenuation: 71-75%, medium to high flocculation. Wyeast #2178 ---------------- ============================================================================= EPILOGUE: KEEPING THIS RESOURCE CURRENT I would like to update this resource periodically, so send me any new techniques, comments on the ones here (good or bad), opinions on yeast strains, or your favorite beer recipes. Patrick Weix weix@netcom.com