Hello,
I've been making straight corn whiskey using enzymes, Sebstar Hi-temp and regular beta. At this time of year my house is a little cold, middle to low 60's. I was thinking of using a lower-temp yeast on this recent batch but I could not get to the homebrew store in time and so I pitched Fleishmans dry bread yeast at abut 90 degrees and things got going nice and strong. I wrap up the fermenter to insulate and hold temp as best I can but the temperature eventually drops, of course. It's been 4 days and the activity level has dropped considerably. I have another 6 days until I will do a run. Is there any point in adding another yeast strain into this scenario that perhaps will work better at the lower temperatures? Since it got a really good start the yeast population should be high so even if it is slow and the activity is cut in half from optimum, there are 6 more days to go. Is it possible my yield would suffer in this situation due to the lowered activity and unfermented sugars?
Two different yeasts in a batch
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- amdamgraham
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Re: Two different yeasts in a batch
Sounds like my normal method. Try it and see how it goes for you, works for me.
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Re: Two different yeasts in a batch
For lower temperatures, just use higher pitch rates of yeast.
Lager yeast strains are ideal for low temperature fermentation. You can then finish the attenuation with a low-temperature wine strain such as Champagne, or another conditioning, which is meant to ferment at cellar temperatures.
Lager yeast strains are ideal for low temperature fermentation. You can then finish the attenuation with a low-temperature wine strain such as Champagne, or another conditioning, which is meant to ferment at cellar temperatures.
The still is not a liar. Mash and ferment quality is 99.9% of your performance.