a day at the coven
rascally rogue















speedie

but it doesnt taste like poison so it must!drsmurto wrote:So maybe the yeast in the bottle isn't the same as the strain being sold by Wyeast?
That would explain the wet dog flavours described in another threadBum wrote:Anyway, how can you say that is a well flocced beer? I can see all sorts of crap in there. Trees, BBQ covers, what might even be a dog, etc. Terrible yeast!
Correct me if I'm wrong (I wasn't born 30 years ago, let alone brewing) but many homebrewing techniques would have been modelled on commercial practices, as per some of the stuff Palmer states in the first edition of How to Brew, but apparently later refutes (I wouldn't know first-hand as I'm too tight to pay for it) - such as prompt racking. The fact that most homebrewers are only dealing with, perhaps, 50 litres, changes things significantly.Bum wrote:Pretty sure he's talking about a prompt secondary being essential for all brews because that is how he learned to brew 30 years ago when he realised he'd reached the pinnacle of beer.