http://www.lallemandbds.com wrote:DistilaMax® LS active dry yeast is a selected strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae bayanus isolate from Champagne that was selected for use in the production of tequila, fruit brandies and neutral grain spirits. DistilaMax® LS produces a broad spectrum of flavor congeners and gives a desirable taste profile on many different substrates, giving it a wide range of distilling applications.
It's not EC1118, but close... Google is your friend...
This is an interesting point. I have a Laffort B0 213 brand yeast, this is a bayanus yeast and compared to another brand's bayanus yeast the results were very similar. Maybe there are slight differences between the producers but I never thought about it that much. We would need the support of someone from the yeast industry.
ideasinbeer wrote: ↑Tue Oct 06, 2020 6:38 am
Forgive my ignorance, but isn't bayanus the generic term for "Wine Yeast"? Then within that terminology there are numerous stains to sort out for use?
Companies like Lalvin etc list multiple yeast strains identified under the Bayanus name, with variants under it?
If this is correct, it makes direct comparison between producers near impossible as they tend to disguise the exact specifics of their strains.
For the fermentation of wine you can usually find "saccharomyces cerevisiae" and "saccaromicies bayanus" which are closely related. What would be interesting to find out is what changes between the various producers of the same yeast.