Weizguy
Barley Bomber
I started this topic in a post regarding the AABC, and mentioned a beer I tasted at the ANHC5. Time for a new thread, and some animated discussion.
At ANHC, Stan Hieronymus presented a talk, entitled Brewing with Wheat, with a strong focus on creating phenolics and wheat beer characters. He stated (pretty much) that the phenolics (4VG only) and esters (specifically, but not limited to iso-amyl acetate) from Belgian yeasts were produced at a higher level and more reproducible rate than true Weizen yeast, and could be used to produce true-tasting German wheat beer.
He seems to think that the phenolics from Belgian yeasts are the same as phenolics from German wheat yeast, and I was open to this, based on graphs and charts and actual experiments, and I was almost convinced, until the tasting...
IMHO, clearly the Ardennes-yeast fermented weizen that was presented at the ANHC was not of the right phenolic profile. I detected the phenols as plummy, rather than dry and bitter (as produced by Weizen yeast).
Has anyone entered a weizen brewed with a Belgian yeast in a BJCP competition, or judged one that clearly had the wrong yeast/phenol profile? What feedback was given? Could you tell there was a difference?
Any and all relevant feedback will be taken on board, but until then I feel there is a valid reason I choose to stick with a traditional style-specific yeast.
Stan, if you're out there, I haven't bought your book yet, but maybe soon...and please pounce on me if you feel the need to correct me. I did not make enough effort to confront you with my judgemental opinion at ANHC5, and seek relevant feedback, or provide food for thought, or a discuss/devise a set of structured experiments to confirm my proposition.
the Weizguy
At ANHC, Stan Hieronymus presented a talk, entitled Brewing with Wheat, with a strong focus on creating phenolics and wheat beer characters. He stated (pretty much) that the phenolics (4VG only) and esters (specifically, but not limited to iso-amyl acetate) from Belgian yeasts were produced at a higher level and more reproducible rate than true Weizen yeast, and could be used to produce true-tasting German wheat beer.
He seems to think that the phenolics from Belgian yeasts are the same as phenolics from German wheat yeast, and I was open to this, based on graphs and charts and actual experiments, and I was almost convinced, until the tasting...
IMHO, clearly the Ardennes-yeast fermented weizen that was presented at the ANHC was not of the right phenolic profile. I detected the phenols as plummy, rather than dry and bitter (as produced by Weizen yeast).
Has anyone entered a weizen brewed with a Belgian yeast in a BJCP competition, or judged one that clearly had the wrong yeast/phenol profile? What feedback was given? Could you tell there was a difference?
Any and all relevant feedback will be taken on board, but until then I feel there is a valid reason I choose to stick with a traditional style-specific yeast.
Stan, if you're out there, I haven't bought your book yet, but maybe soon...and please pounce on me if you feel the need to correct me. I did not make enough effort to confront you with my judgemental opinion at ANHC5, and seek relevant feedback, or provide food for thought, or a discuss/devise a set of structured experiments to confirm my proposition.
the Weizguy