• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Australia and New Zealand Homebrewers Facebook Group!

    Australia and New Zealand Homebrewers Facebook Group

US05 yeast - slight after taste and dry

Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum

Help Support Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

trustyrusty

Well-Known Member
Joined
25/1/11
Messages
968
Reaction score
60
Hi there,

I have made a Morgan’s kit pacific ale with us 05 yeast. There is this after taste .. is it decityl (What does that taste / aroma like? )(spell check?) .. it’s not banana... and it’s seems dry.. don’t know what it is yeast or brew ... have not made pacific ale before. Brew pretty standard and no issues. It’s not bitter but not sweet but after taste makes it unpleasant...

thanks
 
Last edited:
Hi there,

I have made a Morgan’s kit pacific ale with us 05 yeast. There is this after taste .. is it decityl (What does that taste / aroma like? )(spell check?) .. it’s not banana... and it’s seems dry.. don’t know what it is yeast or brew ... have not made pacific ale before. Brew pretty standard and no issues. It’s not bitter but not sweet but after taste makes it unpleasant...

thanks

Mate, you might have an ultra sensitive pallete to certain things like me.
I stopped using US-05 years ago for this very reason. I could detect a slight plasticide type taste, almost like drinking water that's been in a bad quality plastic bottle. Very slight but noticeable.....To Me! Friends have tried the beers & can't figure out what I am talking about but it's there, I can taste it. Any recipes that call for US-05, I simply substitute with a liquid yeast like 1056 or 1272.
I hear ya buddy!
 
Last edited:
Interesting... could be... yes a really strange flavour... could be plasticy .. could not rarely describe it... thanks
 
is it soapy like?
I found us05 can give a detergent/soapy taste if over pitched
 
It was sachet .. 23 l so I cannot see it being over pitched ... not really soapy .. I’ll taste again tomorrow when taste buds fresh ..
 
I tried a mouthful this am. Mmmm not sure if was as bad... don’t it’s weird ... can your taste buds have bad days... :) it also might also its one of the first pulls... but it is definitely dry... and that makes it or the impression of bitterness or takes away sweetness ... don’t like it dry. Is pacific pale ale like that...?
 
Does this sound like a possibility?
Mark
1592015277541.png

1592015324190.png
 
Hi there,

I have made a Morgan’s kit pacific ale with us 05 yeast. There is this after taste .. is it decityl (What does that taste / aroma like? )(spell check?) .. it’s not banana... and it’s seems dry.. don’t know what it is yeast or brew ... have not made pacific ale before. Brew pretty standard and no issues. It’s not bitter but not sweet but after taste makes it unpleasant...

thanks
Hi
Why dont you use morgans much better bigger pack and it is Australian. Gordon
 
I tried a mouthful this am. Mmmm not sure if was as bad... don’t it’s weird ... can your taste buds have bad days... :) it also might also its one of the first pulls... but it is definitely dry... and that makes it or the impression of bitterness or takes away sweetness ... don’t like it dry. Is pacific pale ale like that...?
What temperature did you pitch? What temperature did you ferment?
 
The yeast is very dry... which I think alters the flavour.... loss of sweetness... the aroma of the head is like a very very very slight cheese background... that’s what it seems .. but really subtle... probably better than last night.. and there is after taste I can just describe as unpleasant... cannot describe it...just not a good finish...
 
Ok thanks will try .. you mean the kit yeast or other.. if so what do you recommend?
 
I
24/20 degrees
Think I have found your problem. US-05 seems to be very touchy regarding temperature. 18C seems ideal. I have made a few of the Morgans Pacific Ale brews some years ago and with US-05, 18C for pitch and ferment for 7 days, slow ramp to 22C over next 7 days then cold crash. US05 needs a few extra days to clean up, add patience to your brew sheet.
Recently a friend who brews a Coopers draft kit with US-05 that turns out ok, on the last brew on day 2 there was a 12HR power failure, temp rose from 18c to 23c, the flavour of the finished beer was clearly below par. Hope this helps.
 
I

Think I have found your problem. US-05 seems to be very touchy regarding temperature. 18C seems ideal. I have made a few of the Morgans Pacific Ale brews some years ago and with US-05, 18C for pitch and ferment for 7 days, slow ramp to 22C over next 7 days then cold crash. US05 needs a few extra days to clean up, add patience to your brew sheet.
Recently a friend who brews a Coopers draft kit with US-05 that turns out ok, on the last brew on day 2 there was a 12HR power failure, temp rose from 18c to 23c, the flavour of the finished beer was clearly below par. Hope this helps.

Temp wasn't my problem.
18deg ferment for two weeks, one week at 2degC cold crash. Taste was there & all following beers using it. I even tried a different stainless fermenter to no avail. It's not a process or procedure problem for me. I don't know what the hell it is but I can taste it.
 
As above, Its well worth removing Chlorine from your water, using Campden will cost you about 5c/brew.
A plasticky flavour is one of the many ways low-level Chlorophenols are described.
Naturally if your sure its the worlds most popular dry yeast that's to blame, rather than failing to preform one of the most basic steps in good brewing practice - meh - choose another yeast.
Mark
 
Hi thanks first time I have used us05 yeast in ages, not had this before? Or with kit yeasts...
 
I

Think I have found your problem. US-05 seems to be very touchy regarding temperature. 18C seems ideal. I have made a few of the Morgans Pacific Ale brews some years ago and with US-05, 18C for pitch and ferment for 7 days, slow ramp to 22C over next 7 days then cold crash. US05 needs a few extra days to clean up, add patience to your brew sheet.
Recently a friend who brews a Coopers draft kit with US-05 that turns out ok, on the last brew on day 2 there was a 12HR power failure, temp rose from 18c to 23c, the flavour of the finished beer was clearly below par. Hope this helps.

I didn’t do 18, but I do put in keg where it finishes off, is that a problem? Sort of like secondary fermentation and probably around 22 , depending on room temp.. I don’t cold crash... System seems to work with kit yeasts.. have had this before... first time I have used us 05 for awhile.. thanks
 
Last edited:
US-05 is used by hundreds of breweries and homebrewers to make thousands of different award-winning beers. There is no problem with that specific yeast variety when used in accordance with the manufacturer's specification.

I would be looking very closely at your cleaning and sanitisation process to ensure you aren't adding remnant chemicals like chlorine. If you're on town water, perhaps look at filtering your water as the level of chlorine, chloramine and other chemicals in the water supply will vary.
 
Is this yeast more sensitive to bad water or chlorine? If I smell it I think it has chlorine smell. Someone once told me they let water stand in buckets for awhile. I have not had this before with kit yeast packs?
 
Temp wasn't my problem.
18deg ferment for two weeks, one week at 2degC cold crash. Taste was there & all following beers using it. I even tried a different stainless fermenter to no avail. It's not a process or procedure problem for me. I don't know what the hell it is but I can taste it.
Think that is my issue... I have stainless steel fermenter too..
 
Is this yeast more sensitive to bad water or chlorine? If I smell it I think it has chlorine smell. Someone once told me they let water stand in buckets for awhile. I have not had this before with kit yeast packs?
The problem with your logic is that you aren't looking at what is really going on.
The formation of Chlorophenols has nothing to do with yeast its a chemical reaction between any Chlorine in the water and Phenols from malt (mostly extracted from husks, maybe some from hops to).

Sitting water in a bucket or even boiling all your water will reduce free Chlorine, it probably wont get rid of Chloramines, most municipal water is treated with a mixture of Cl gas and Chloramines these days.
A Carbon filter will remove both, as will adding some metabisulfite.

Comparing the little 6g kit yeast with an 11g pitch of US-05 isn't really all that reasonable, US-05 is more attenuative (eats more sugars) than most other dry yeasts, tends to give a lower FG and if used properly should leave less yeast flavour's in the finished beer. Most yeast flavours are made early in the process while the yeast is reproducing so more yeast at the start means less time making yeast and flavours.
Actually that's why there is a recommended pitch range, too little = slow and estery, increased chance of infection... too much = little yeast flavour, reduced bitterness, some faults from unconsumed lipids... its a range that 6g doesn't really fit into.

I suspect part of the problem is that using better yeast and more of it has made better cleaner, even crisper beer, it has also left room to taste other faults that were always there, just hiding behind a bunch of other flavours.
Mark

Edit
Nothing to do with stainless steel, in fact its less likely to cause problems than anything else (well glass might be better).
M
 
The problem with your logic is that you aren't looking at what is really going on.
The formation of Chlorophenols has nothing to do with yeast its a chemical reaction between any Chlorine in the water and Phenols from malt (mostly extracted from husks, maybe some from hops to).

Sitting water in a bucket or even boiling all your water will reduce free Chlorine, it probably wont get rid of Chloramines, most municipal water is treated with a mixture of Cl gas and Chloramines these days.
A Carbon filter will remove both, as will adding some metabisulfite.

Comparing the little 6g kit yeast with an 11g pitch of US-05 isn't really all that reasonable, US-05 is more attenuative (eats more sugars) than most other dry yeasts, tends to give a lower FG and if used properly should leave less yeast flavour's in the finished beer. Most yeast flavours are made early in the process while the yeast is reproducing so more yeast at the start means less time making yeast and flavours.
Actually that's why there is a recommended pitch range, too little = slow and estery, increased chance of infection... too much = little yeast flavour, reduced bitterness, some faults from unconsumed lipids... its a range that 6g doesn't really fit into.

I suspect part of the problem is that using better yeast and more of it has made better cleaner, even crisper beer, it has also left room to taste other faults that were always there, just hiding behind a bunch of other flavours.
Mark

Edit
Nothing to do with stainless steel, in fact its less likely to cause problems than anything else (well glass might be better).
M
I agree with all above, US-05 is a neutral flavour yeast at lower temps. I know the specs say up tp 23C but really 18C is ideal. The start of this thread started with
trustyrusty
asking why his Pacific ale Morgans Kit made using US-05 was dry and some unexpected flavour. He later states he pitched at 24 and fermented at 20. Is it possible (probable) that the 11.5g US-05 pitched and femented at a higher then ideal temp resulted in a more attenuated beer, hence the dry observation and other flavour changes compared to using 7d of kit yeast.
I have advised fellow brewers that do Tin Kits to ditch the supplied yeast and if doing ales use US-05, BRY-97, or Morgans with good temperature control. All report an improvement in results. As for other replies regarding water, chlorine etc. I do not see how this can make much difference between using US-05 or the kit yeast other than the possible greater attenuation revealed in a crisper, dryer beer flavours that may not have been otherwise noticed,
 
Thanks it might be improving a bit as it’s settling more? Or I’m getting used to it. The other night it was very unpleasant but tonight it’s ok...? Improving...But it had been in fridge for a week..still dry I think. I probably prefer less dry yeast (any recommendations? Bry 97?) ... I have used bry 97 and I liked it, especially in darker beers... I have fermenting fridge... it has helped a lot.. don’t think I have dumped one since...
 
Last edited:
Are you sure you're not coming down with something. That can affect your taste. Once I could swear I could taste bacon in a beer I made. Two days later I got crook as a dog (no offence to our canine friends). Just a thought.
 
Thanks it might be improving a bit as it’s settling more? Or I’m getting used to it. The other night it was very unpleasant but tonight it’s ok...? Improving...But it had been in fridge for a week..still dry I think. I probably prefer less dry yeast (any recommendations? Bry 97?) ... I have used bry 97 and I liked it, especially in darker beers... I have fermenting fridge... it has helped a lot.. don’t think I have dumped one since...
Please if you can let us know what you mean by Dry. IMO a dry beer is one that is more fully attenuated, ie. less remaining sugars and depending on OG usually higher ABV.
 
Back
Top