I'm about to crash it and keg so I'll see if the flavour is still there after that. I managed to get a fair amount of trub into the fermenter so maybe some of the flavour is coming from that.I use Nottingham quite a lot. Our blonde ale, which is the house favourite and on a regular turn around is fermented at 14 deg C with Notty and I have never noticed any real yeast influence, especially not any "nutiness". Another advantage of Notty is that after kegging and a week in the keezer the beer is crystal clear. However, if you do want a bit of yeast influence, I've found K-97 to give better results (more of a kolsch style maybe?), but the yeast stays in suspension, so it takes a week longer to clear (at 2degC).
I also use 50/50 Nottingham and S-04 for my English ales and stout, which are fermented warmer at 19 to 21 deg C. Makes a beast of a yeast. Fast start, all the English ale yeastiness of S-04 (seems to pair well with Notty) plus Notty's better finish, which avoids the dreaded S-04 stall. There is some "nuttiness" in the ESB, but I had put that down to the MO grain! Maybe it's the Notty!
Enter your email address to join: