Are you sure that's the right thread sammus?
That thread must be *the* most controversial thread ever posted on AHB. Nasty, acrimonious bile flying left and right. If you miseed it, you might not get that message because it was heavily, and I mean, heavily, moderated.
Now just look at the first post ... it contains an assertian by PP that some of the best beers he's tasted were fermented hot, and he doesn't mention the yeast used. And the first page are certainly not people humbly agreeing ....
so which thread did you mean?
i find it hard to believe that there are so many commercial kits out there that say the same thing. and yet are wrong...
First post here, but this is what I came here to find out.
I've tried brewing on and off for 8 years, done about 8 different batches, every single one was absolutely disgusting and undrinkable.
The last time I tried was about 5 years ago, but I'm giving it another go. All my brews were simple condensed can kits with brewing sugar, done in the cooler part of the year (porters and stouts for winter!), all of them done with the yeast in the kit. None of them worked, all my friends who have independantly tried home brew had the same experience.
At first I though it was infection, but there was nothing growing on the suface, things like a good dousing of bleach and a rinse of everything before brewing was tried. It seemed more like the yeast just gave up and didn't finish the job.
other people who did it in warmer climates had the same result.
It seemed like it just did not complete fermentation, it always started up and bubbled up through the airlock quickly, just never completed the job. The brew stayed very green and yeasty (ie "bad homebrew" smell) throughout the entire time it was fermented, no matter for how long, and kept that smell/taste no matter how long the bottles were kept for. Same thing even happened to others at high temps. It always carbonated in the bottles, so obviously the yeast was still there, but I'm at a loss on why I've never had a drinkable homebrew no matter how many times I tried and other people I know have tried.
Unless it was something else that occured for all my home brews, through all my friends homebrews, through all our different proceedures, it's been the same result, crap beer.
I always suspected infection, but now I'm trying to give homebrewing another chance, I realise all the brews started bubbling quickly and never had anything discusting on the top etc, what else could it be except for the yeast?
Unless it was something else that occured for all my home brews, through all my friends homebrews, through all our different proceedures, it's been the same result, crap beer.
I always suspected infection, but now I'm trying to give homebrewing another chance, I realise all the brews started bubbling quickly and never had anything discusting on the top etc, what else could it be except for the yeast?
I also never claimed it was a great yeast, just that they put there and those instructions on the tin because the results are still acceptable. I thought it was better in my 25C weather than at 18C in the fridge. And in direct response to the OP, no, crawling over 26C is definitely NOT suicide and could very well turn out a decent drop (all things relative).
i knew it.if you let it get a few deg. over 20 youget a bouquet of roses. If you let it get to 28C I'd shudder to think what you'd get!
One of my best brews was one that stayed at 25 degrees for the entire fermentation.Fermentation temps are all about CONTROL.
i knew it.
i was certain that a yeast strain would produce a different ester at different temps. by knowing your yeast and your fementation stage you could alter the temp to a specific degree and only get the esters made at that temp level.
that would explain the chimay. damn those monks are smart cookies.
it's beyond me of course and rampant ester production will taste bad of course but esters of themselves are very useful for scents and flavoring. we use them all the time a good brewer would be able to harness this if they had the knowledege.
btw i also think beginner should stick to the low end of the temp pool if they can. but the one recommended for that yeast. B)
The brews tasted really bad, but I have no idea what an infection tastes like. From all reports, once a brew kicks off and starts bubbling, infections are rare to get? I never had a problem with the yeast taking more than half a day to well and truly be bubbling.Have your brews tasted off as in an infection. Did you use a hydrometer to determine if the fermentation had finished. How did you clean / sanitise your bottles??
Enter your email address to join: