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HOMEBREW Digest #5139

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
HOMEBREW Digest
 · 6 months ago

HOMEBREW Digest #5139		             Tue 30 January 2007 


FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
Digest Janitor: pbabcock at hbd.org


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Contents:
Re: Frozen dry Yeast (Bob Tower)
Re: What do malt color values really mean? ("Joe Walts")
Re: Frozen dry Yeast (Jeff Renner)
2007 Upper Mississippi Mash-Out Results ("Al Boyce")
Lagering redux ("Gus Iverson")
Re: Diacetyl??can I get rid of it?? (Paul Waters)
Coconut Cup (Scott Graham)


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----------------------------------------------------------------------


Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2007 22:44:18 -0800
From: Bob Tower <roberttower at sbcglobal.net>
Subject: Re: Frozen dry Yeast

Rich Lynch accidently put his dry yeast packets in the freezer for a
few days and wonders if the yeast is ruined or if ice crystals have
formed killing the yeast cells.

I purchased a large amount of dry yeast and have stored it in a
freezer for the past 8 months. As of yet I haven't had any bad yeast.
Can anyone out there confirm if below freezing temps will hurt dry
yeast in the long term? It sure hasn't in the short term. Also, there
shouldn't be any moisture inside the yeast package and thus no way
for ice to form.

Bob Tower / Los Angeles, CA


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 07:02:10 -0600
From: "Joe Walts" <jwalts at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: What do malt color values really mean?

Hey Fred, I believe that SRM is the wort color of an 8 degree Plato
laboratory mash (called a congress mash).

Joe
Madison, WI


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 09:14:20 -0500
From: Jeff Renner <jsrenner at umich.edu>
Subject: Re: Frozen dry Yeast

Richard Lynch <rlny7575 at yahoo.com> is worried:

> I accidentally froze 5 or 6 sachets
> of dry yeast for a few days - got them mixed up with
> my hops, woops.
> Are these still worth trying to use? Or can I assume
> that ice crystals formed and rendered them useless?

No problem, especially since it was only a few days. Many of use
routinely store dry yeast in the freezer and have for years. It
doesn't really freeze as there is virtually no moisture in dry yeast.

It may not be the best place to store all dry yeasts, though. Here
is an answer by Lallemand's Dr. Clayton Cone from the Fortnight of
Yeast here on HBD a few years ago

http://consumer.lallemand.com/danstar-lalvin/
fortnightyeast.html#freezing

"The original research on Active Dry Yeast shelf life stability was
done over 60 years ago. The interest at that time was stability at
room temperature (20C) and at refrigerated temperature (4 C). The dry
yeast was not designed with freeze storage in mind. No real studies
were made on storage in a freezer.
"We have found out recently that many people have been storing our
Active Dry Yeast in freezers for years with no apparent adverse
effect. A preliminary freeze storage trial with one of our strains
indicated some damage was done. This may indicate that the damage
might be strain related. It is too early to draw any conclusion. We
will continue to investigate. Thanks for your interest. We will keep
you posted."

Hope this helps.

Jeff

- ---
Jeff Renner in Ann Arbor, Michigan USA, jsrenner at umich.edu
"One never knows, do one?" Fats Waller, American Musician, 1904-1943





------------------------------

Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 10:30:10 -0600
From: "Al Boyce" <alboyce at comcast.net>
Subject: 2007 Upper Mississippi Mash-Out Results

Results, recipes and photos from the Upper Mississippi Mash Out are posted
at www.mnbrewers.com/mashout/ <http://www.mnbrewers.com/mashout/>

Photos can be found at the bottom of the recipes, and more will be going up
today.

This year, more than 120 volunteers from eight states and Canada answered
the call to help run what has become the third largest beer competition in
the country. Not bad for a six-year-old contest. To all those volunteers,
a huge THANK YOU! It was a great collaboration between the St. Paul
Homebrewers and the Minnesota Home Brewers Association.

Held last Friday and Saturday in St. Paul, Minnesota, the Mash Out
experienced a 68 percent increase in entries over 2006. The 266 brewers who
entered the contest submitted 918 entries. They represented 66 homebrew
clubs and came from 33 states. Clearly, the rest of the nation has
discovered the Mash Out - 525 entries were from outside Minnesota. There
were gold medal winners from both coasts, and Ed Moore has the distinction
of traveling the farthest: 1,100 miles from Texas. We also had the honor
of having Gordon Strong, Grandmaster III judge and BJCP director, contribute
to Best of Show judging as well being head judge of numerous flights.

The Mash Out awarded 105 medals, including Best of Show carved wooden
chalices for beer, mead and cider. Every winner received a prize. Score
sheets were in the mail within three days.





------------------------------

Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 10:41:31 -0800
From: "Gus Iverson" <gus.iverson at gmail.com>
Subject: Lagering redux

My lager I was concerned with has finally started foaming and the
airlock is burping. I guess I just had an excess of impatience.

A new surprise is the amount of foam on the ale I brewed this weekend.
I've never seen anything like this. Personally, I've never needed a
blowoff setup but there's foam an inch from the airlock (5 gallons
beer in a 6.5 carboy). It seems like it is calming down a bit now so
I've left it alone for the time being but this was relatively alarming
when I checked on it last night.

This is only my 3rd all-grain batch (the lager was the second). I'm
guessing that the wort I'm producing is much more fermentable than the
extract brews I've been doing? This already seems to be proving out
with my first all-grain beer stopping at 1.008 (OG 1.065) using 1056
and this was with some dextrin malt included! I'm guessing I need to
mash at a touch higher temperatures...


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 11:10:16 -0800 (PST)
From: Paul Waters <pwaters3 at yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Diacetyl??can I get rid of it??

Doug
The Diacetyl can be gotten rid of by Krausening. I had
a lager that had a good dose of it. What I did was
made a small batch of starter, 1 gal of 1.050 gravity
unhopped (I was low on volume in the primary and High
on the Bitter) hoped to solve those problems also.

I took a sample of the Diacetyl lager and used that
for my yeast seed. I let it sit for 24hrs by
necessity, that is after I got home from work the next
day. I added it back to the Primary and left it for a
couple days at 68F for the "Diacetyl rest". It took
care of the problem just fine and have continue with
the rest of the lagering process.

I was about to post my reply but reread your question
and your problem is with an older beer that has been
lagered. It would seem that the Diacety would be
diminished by now. The kruasening might not work and
there may be other issues going on with the beer. It
will be interesting to hear what others have to say on this.





------------------------------

Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 20:18:32 -0500 (EST)
From: Scott Graham <grahams at cs.fiu.edu>
Subject: Coconut Cup

Greetings from the members of the Miami Area Society of Homebrewers (MASH)
in Miami, FL.

It is almost time for this year's Coconut Cup homebrew competition. We are
accepting all of the 2004 BJCP categories, as well as our special COCONUT
BREW category.

Entries of TWO bottles are due by February 9th. Please use the on-line
entry form available at the Coconut Cup website,
http://hbd.org/mash/coconut.html .

Final judging and the awards ceremony will be held on February 17th, 2007
at the Titanic Brewing Company in Coral Gables, FL. Please contact me if
you are interested and willing to judge. We will have some fun activities
planned for the out-of-town judges.

I hope to see you (or at least your beers and meads) in Miami!

Scott Graham
Coconut Cup Judge Coordinator








------------------------------
End of HOMEBREW Digest #5139, 01/30/07
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