Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
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Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
I've only seen an older thread from Odin, Dan P. etc and wanted to gauge the community on how brettanomyces is being used.
My girl recently bought a few brett beers since we haven't had em in a minute and while catching a whiff of it I thought it would be a great yeast to use for my rum instead of the wine yeast I'm using.
I took the dreggs of a couple bottles into a mason jar and then once a rum strip was complete took a little spent dunder/wash (for nutrients) and added a little sugar.
Seems to have taken off in there within a day or two. (I'm assuming it's just the Brett since I boiled the hell out of the rum wash on the strip).
I think for the rum it'll work great for a bold and flavorful rum, but I'm not sure about whiskey. I'll stick to the wine yeast for now.
I know Brett is real slow so I'll be vigilant with this starter. Apparently keeping it in the fridge too long can also kill the yeasties. Apparently Brett is sensitive so the starter is at room temp for now.
I say all this to gauge the community on if y'all have used Brett in your rums or whiskeys?
Thoughts???
My girl recently bought a few brett beers since we haven't had em in a minute and while catching a whiff of it I thought it would be a great yeast to use for my rum instead of the wine yeast I'm using.
I took the dreggs of a couple bottles into a mason jar and then once a rum strip was complete took a little spent dunder/wash (for nutrients) and added a little sugar.
Seems to have taken off in there within a day or two. (I'm assuming it's just the Brett since I boiled the hell out of the rum wash on the strip).
I think for the rum it'll work great for a bold and flavorful rum, but I'm not sure about whiskey. I'll stick to the wine yeast for now.
I know Brett is real slow so I'll be vigilant with this starter. Apparently keeping it in the fridge too long can also kill the yeasties. Apparently Brett is sensitive so the starter is at room temp for now.
I say all this to gauge the community on if y'all have used Brett in your rums or whiskeys?
Thoughts???
-El Cubanazo
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- still_stirrin
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
What is the brewery’s name? I assume it is Belgian because that style of beer is traditionally a Belgian ale. But if it’s from a brewery in Belgium, especially a major brewery, I would believe that the yeast you recovered from the bottle is not the same yeast that is used to ferment the beer.ElCubanazo wrote:...I took the dreggs of a couple bottles into a mason jar and then once a rum strip was complete took a little spent dunder/wash (for nutrients) and added a little sugar.
Seems to have taken off in there within a day or two. (I'm assuming it's just the Brett since I boiled the hell out of the rum wash on the strip).???
Most of the majors who use bottle conditioning (where yeast is used to carbonate the beer) use a different yeast strain to add the carbonation. Their ferment yeast is more than likely a proprietary strain maintained in their labs to produce the characteristic flavors indicative of the style, maintaining their signature product. So, the culture you propogated more than likely is a bottling yeast strain, not the Brett that produces the spicy phenols/horse blanket notes you taste in their beers.
But with that said, I wonder if the flavors you’re trying to replicate will come over through the distillation. Phenols typically are high boiling point constituents and only a small portion would actually make it out of the boiler, let alone into the very late tails. Of course, if the ferment produces acids, those may come over earlier in the boil. But it depends on what the products of the ferment really are.
Regardless, it is a great experiment, which if nothing else, will give you an expanded knowledge basis.
Good luck with it. Be safe, responsible, and discrete.
ss
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Ahhh, SS, this is the second time you've made me feel stupid this week! But I'm learning so that's okay haha.still_stirrin wrote: So, the culture you propogated more than likely is a bottling yeast strain, not the Brett that produces the spicy phenols/horse blanket notes you taste in their beers.
The beer was Almanac's "Peach Galaxy". Cali based brewery and a Belgian Saison style. According to their info it's made with Brett.
Yeah I should've kept in mind that Brett obviously might not be the only yeast in the bottle at the time. I might just dump it and order some from whitelabs or something.
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Oh, I am not trying to make you feel stupid. Sorry if that's how it was received.ElCubanazo wrote:Ahhh, SS, this is the second time you've made me feel stupid this week! But I'm learning so that's okay haha.still_stirrin wrote: So, the culture you propogated more than likely is a bottling yeast strain, not the Brett that produces the spicy phenols/horse blanket notes you taste in their beers.
As a beer brewer and certified beer judge for 30 years, I have visited many, many times with novice beer brewers who thought they could culture the yeast sediment from an import bottle of Belgian beer to replicate the signature character of the paradigms. And time and again they've failed and wondered why. Intelligence from the major breweries has affirmed that indeed the fermentation yeast is different than the bottling yeast because of the extremely proprietary nature of their fermentation yeast strains. And often times, they are colloquial to the region in which the brewery is founded.
So, that is why I asked you about the brewery's identity. Domestic producers of traditional European beers may not follow the same protocol of yeast management. I simply don't have enough information to make that judgement. OK?
Again, "fermented with" and "bottled with" may (or may not) be the same...I simply don't know.ElCubanazo wrote:The beer was Almanac's "Peach Galaxy". Cali based brewery and a Belgian Saison style. According to their info it's made with Brett.
So, don't panic. You may be fine with your ferment. But, whether or not any of that quality will come over in the still is "to be determined". I seriously doubt you will get much of it. But, the ferment should progress typically.ElCubanazo wrote:Yeah I should've kept in mind that Brett obviously might not be the only yeast in the bottle at the time. I might just dump it and order some from whitelabs or something.
However, after you first asked this question, I did more investigation into the Brett yeast fermentation processes and how it works reducing acids into the phenols that you perceive in the beer. The thing to note is that the predecessors to the phenol production actually relies on the grains, or at least the husks of the grains, ie - barley husks and wheat (hulls) in the mash tun. So the question arises whether or not a rum ferment (molasses) will even have the precursors necessary to produce those phenols you'd like to target. On the other hand, some of the phenols are produced by reduction (oxygenation) of some of the acids produced in the ferment.
Summarizing, you may get some notes in the ferment...maybe not. Regardless, it is very unlikely that much, if any of those notes will come over to your spirit product. Just try it and see.
And don't "kick the bucket over"... yet.
ss
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My 5-grain Bourbon recipe: Special K
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Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Haha don’t worry I was kidding about the feeling stupid thing. It’s just you’ve pointed out things I should’ve thought of!still_stirrin wrote:Oh, I am not trying to make you feel stupid. Sorry if that's how it was received.ElCubanazo wrote:Ahhh, SS, this is the second time you've made me feel stupid this week! But I'm learning so that's okay haha.still_stirrin wrote: So, the culture you propogated more than likely is a bottling yeast strain, not the Brett that produces the spicy phenols/horse blanket notes you taste in their beers.
As a beer brewer and certified beer judge for 30 years, I have visited many, many times with novice beer brewers who thought they could culture the yeast sediment from an import bottle of Belgian beer to replicate the signature character of the paradigms. And time and again they've failed and wondered why. Intelligence from the major breweries has affirmed that indeed the fermentation yeast is different than the bottling yeast because of the extremely proprietary nature of their fermentation yeast strains. And often times, they are colloquial to the region in which the brewery is founded.
So, that is why I asked you about the brewery's identity. Domestic producers of traditional European beers may not follow the same protocol of yeast management. I simply don't have enough information to make that judgement. OK?
Again, "fermented with" and "bottled with" may (or may not) be the same...I simply don't know.ElCubanazo wrote:The beer was Almanac's "Peach Galaxy". Cali based brewery and a Belgian Saison style. According to their info it's made with Brett.
So, don't panic. You may be fine with your ferment. But, whether or not any of that quality will come over in the still is "to be determined". I seriously doubt you will get much of it. But, the ferment should progress typically.ElCubanazo wrote:Yeah I should've kept in mind that Brett obviously might not be the only yeast in the bottle at the time. I might just dump it and order some from whitelabs or something.
However, after you first asked this question, I did more investigation into the Brett yeast fermentation processes and how it works reducing acids into the phenols that you perceive in the beer. The thing to note is that the predecessors to the phenol production actually relies on the grains, or at least the husks of the grains, ie - barley husks and wheat (hulls) in the mash tun. So the question arises whether or not a rum ferment (molasses) will even have the precursors necessary to produce those phenols you'd like to target. On the other hand, some of the phenols are produced by reduction (oxygenation) of some of the acids produced in the ferment.
Summarizing, you may get some notes in the ferment...maybe not. Regardless, it is very unlikely that much, if any of those notes will come over to your spirit product. Just try it and see.
And don't "kick the bucket over"... yet.
ss
Now that I’m back home and smelling this starter I’ve made it really doesn’t smell like a brett.
I’ll hop online now to order a good brett sample. I’m looking at Yeast Bay right now and they’ve got some good stuff. I’ll leave this ferment going for now to see if it starts smelling brett-like but if not I’ll toss it and start with one of these brett samples I’m about to order.
I’ll keep the thread update on the results! May take a few weeks/months!
-El Cubanazo
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
The brilliant Michael Tonsmiere has a big list of bottled beers with viable microbes that can be cultured, check it out:
https://www.themadfermentationist.com/p ... t.html?m=1" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
https://www.themadfermentationist.com/p ... t.html?m=1" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Oh this is brilliant. Love it. Thanks for the resource!masonsjax wrote:The brilliant Michael Tonsmiere has a big list of bottled beers with viable microbes that can be cultured, check it out:
https://www.themadfermentationist.com/p ... t.html?m=1" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
I've noticed that the Almanac beer in question isn't on the list so safe to assume whatever I'm fermenting in this starter isn't the to Brett used to make the beer.
Last night bought a Brett mix from great Yeast Bay (they seem to be associated with whitelabs somehow).
I'll report back once I've got the starter going or once I've pitched into a molasses wash!
-El Cubanazo
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
The Yeast Bay contracted White Labs to archive and package their stuff, so the packaging looks the same. I've had good results from their products. East Coast Yeast also has some fantastic wild blends and isolates, but can be hard to get. When it's in stock at love2brew.com, you need to grab it while you can.
- Oldvine Zin
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
My personal opinion is that brett has no place anywhere near anything fermenting. It's a flaw in wine making and marketing people are waxing it into something that it's not. "Earthy barnyard", yea goat shit and ...
OVZ
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Apparently it's a staple in the cider industry tho, hence the name BRETT since it's associated with British cider making. In Greek the name is something like "British yeast". And I love me some British style cider so gonna have to agree to disagree on that one haha.Oldvine Zin wrote:My personal opinion is that brett has no place anywhere near anything fermenting. It's a flaw in wine making and marketing people are waxing it into something that it's not. "Earthy barnyard", yea goat shit and ...
OVZ
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Brett used as a primary yeast can produce some really fruity (tropical) flavours. I've done this in beer making. You can buy pure strains. It acts very much like a regular beer yeast, just a little slower. Used as a 'secondary' yeast is where it produces its funk. If you ferment with a regular yeast then pitch (or pitch a tiny amount with the primary yeast) a small amunt of brett and leave it for about three months it will produce all sorts of funky, interesting flavourswhich I reckon could be quite interesting coming out of a still. It's something I plan on doing in the future with an all malt mash.
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Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Yeah, I've recently been using only a Brett. Bruxelensis strain in my rum washes and it's been interesting thus far. Got it from The Yeast Bay which is associated with White Labs.
I used a cocktail of theirs in a previous batch and while it came out similar to my previous wine yeast rums there's definitely an interesting depth there that the Brett contributed. I'll keep using it and report back in a few months!
Respond to this thread to remind me if I've forgotten!
I used a cocktail of theirs in a previous batch and while it came out similar to my previous wine yeast rums there's definitely an interesting depth there that the Brett contributed. I'll keep using it and report back in a few months!
Respond to this thread to remind me if I've forgotten!
-El Cubanazo
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
OKAY. I've done one big spirit run and several stripping runs and I can safely say Brett (at least the strain I've been using) IS NOT a good yeast to use for rum.
The spirit run initially came out somewhat peppery and pretty perfume-y and after aging in my "barrel" (carboy with oak chips and coffee filters on the top) it's gotten *MUCH WORSE*
I'm gonna reflux distill the entirety of what I have now to salvage it. But MAN is it bad.
Maybe it's the strain I used, but I'm giving up on Brett as a primary fermenter in my rum. Back to wine yeast for me!
The spirit run initially came out somewhat peppery and pretty perfume-y and after aging in my "barrel" (carboy with oak chips and coffee filters on the top) it's gotten *MUCH WORSE*
I'm gonna reflux distill the entirety of what I have now to salvage it. But MAN is it bad.
Maybe it's the strain I used, but I'm giving up on Brett as a primary fermenter in my rum. Back to wine yeast for me!
-El Cubanazo
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Is there a reason that your going to use wine yeasts?
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
I've used them in the past to great effect. Specifically lavlin.Saltbush Bill wrote:Is there a reason your going to use wine yeasts?
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Do NOT be discouraged...you have saved the rest of us HOURS of time doing research like this...sorry it didn't turn out better...but
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Thanks! Yeah I'm glad to have contributed to the base of knowledge on this site!kiwi Bruce wrote:Do NOT be discouraged...you have saved the rest of us HOURS of time doing research like this...sorry it didn't turn out better...but
Still saddens me. I really enjoy Brett beers even as a primary ferment. Definitely not for rum tho!
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
Sorry to hear that you have potentially lost a batch learning about BrettElCubanazo wrote:OKAY. I've done one big spirit run and several stripping runs and I can safely say Brett (at least the strain I've been using) IS NOT a good yeast to use for rum.
The spirit run initially came out somewhat peppery and pretty perfume-y and after aging in my "barrel" (carboy with oak chips and coffee filters on the top) it's gotten *MUCH WORSE*
OVZ
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Re: Brettanomyces as primary yeast pitch in rum or whiskey?
I will say that blending very small amounts of the Brett rum into regular wine yeast rum actually makes an interesting product.
I probably won't experiment any more with blending the Brett rum but if I do I'll report.
I will say that whatever made the Brett rum overwhelmingly perfumey did NOT go away with a reflux run. That must mean that whatever it is has a close enough boiling point to ethanol to come through still.
Right now I'm considering using it as a base for a citrus liqueur just to friggen use the stuff.
I probably won't experiment any more with blending the Brett rum but if I do I'll report.
I will say that whatever made the Brett rum overwhelmingly perfumey did NOT go away with a reflux run. That must mean that whatever it is has a close enough boiling point to ethanol to come through still.
Right now I'm considering using it as a base for a citrus liqueur just to friggen use the stuff.
-El Cubanazo
¡Viva Cuba Libre!
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