The Aleuminati-the not so secret society of better beer drinkers

Today I finally bottled the lager I brewed on January 19. Coming out of the fermenter it tasted very good. I would put the taste at about a Steinlager, one of the few commercial lagers I really like. Steinlager is a New Zealand brew that my college in River Falls, Wisconsin, used to serve. I also have fond memories of it from my time in New Zealand. I remember on a blazing hot day hiking over a hill on Great Barrier Island, into Port Fitzroy, and seeing the little shop with the Steinlager sign. I bought two and Terry and I drank them on the front porch. That ice cold beer was such a relief.

This was my first brew with dry lager yeast (Saflager S-23). I have always been told that dry lager yeast is a bust. Not so. Going into the bottle, I am happy with the results. But I can’t leave well enough alone. I decided to prime it with a cup of maple syrup. We shall see how that goes.

As an update, the beer I brewed with Thames Valley yeast is now at almost exactly eight weeks in the fermenter and still very active. Suspecting an infection, I used a bottle filler as an improvised wine thief and sampled some. Surprisingly, it was quite good. I have never had ale go so long in the fermenter and anything good come of it. For now, it looks as though this will be a good beer.

I must admit I am pretty excited. I was beginning to fear that both these beers were going to be garden food.

Tags: dry, lager, yeast

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Eight weeks ... wow. What was the O.G. of your over-achieving beer? What temp are you fermenting this one at?I've never heard of an ale in active fermentation this long, short of periodic doses of new fermentables in the bucket/carboy/tank ...

Holy fermentations, Batman!

Reply to This

The OG was only 40 so I am wondering what exactly is fermenting right now. Most of the time the fermenter temperature was between 52 and 55 degrees. It is a mystery to me. I have yet to meet anyone else who has used Thames Valley yeast, so I do not know if it an unusually slow worker in general, or was slow due to the temperature.

Baffled Brewing-TIM

Reply to This

RSS

Aleuminati Admins

Have questions, concerns or ideas? Contact one of the Aleuminati Administrators anytime!

Shawn Connelly

Click to visit Shawn's profile!

Rob DeNunzio

Click to visit Rob's profile!

Ray Grace

Click to visit Ray's Profile!


Support our Cause!





Blog Posts

Rob Zob

...what i like also:

Posted by Rob Zob on November 10, 2009 at 6:57pm

Cindy Fallsen

Sugar Free Beer

Posted by Cindy Fallsen on November 9, 2009 at 9:52pm

Barry Wasser

Barry's Beer Reviews I Westmalle Tripel and Cheese

Posted by Barry Wasser on November 8, 2009 at 1:30pm

Grant

Brew day

Posted by Grant on November 1, 2009 at 10:49am

Tim Nichols

Washington beer community loses a true icon, Dick Young

Posted by Tim Nichols on October 28, 2009 at 11:30pm

Chris of thebeergeek.com

Our Maine Travel Report

Posted by Chris of thebeergeek.com on October 26, 2009 at 1:16pm

Bernie Dorman

Writing About Beer... While Drinking One

Posted by Bernie Dorman on October 16, 2009 at 7:24pm

KronoNaut

Building a portable kegerator.

Posted by KronoNaut on September 30, 2009 at 3:08am — 1 Comment

BeerPhilosopher.com

Since 2006, the Beer Philosopher has been helping people all over the world "drink wisely!" Click the logo below to visit the beerphilosopher.com blog.

Merchandise

Proclaim your affection for beer and the internet with this new, fun design from the shoppe!


© 2009   Created by Shawn, the Beer Philosopher

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!