Hi Guys,
I have two questions/topics I'd like to bring up...
Had a JS Porter the other day for the first time and I fell instantly in love.
Anyway I was looking to try and get a recipe that was similar.
I looking for a recipe I read somewhere the other day that JS porter is made using Lager yeast not ale yeast as I first though. Does anyone have an opinion on this?
Also I think it's now cold enough at home to brew lagers under the house without the aid of a fridge (15 degrees during the day, 7 degrees at night). Is this to much of a deviation? Will my yeast quit overnight? Should I get a cheap fridge and thermostat and stop asking questions?
Was gunna try the following recipe. Was after a darker malier lager and had an old tin of coopers lying around from a mate.
1 can coopers lager (6 years old)
1.5kg Amber malt extract
200g crystal malt
50g chocolate malt
15g Hersbrucker (10 min)
Saflager
21L
Cheers,
Jay.
James Squire Porter & Lager Yeast
Jay.. when i went on the msb tour the temps that the brewer mentioned (low-mid teens) seemed to suggest that most of their beers are brewed with a lager yeast.. or atleast something that doesn't mind the lower temps..
i'm not sure whether 15deg is too high, or if 7 is too low for saflager? as i havent used it in ages..
I've recently been using whitelabs san fran lager yeast which can handle temps upto 16deg (from memory) & have been sticking ice packs & a wet towel around the fermentor during the day.
i'm not sure whether 15deg is too high, or if 7 is too low for saflager? as i havent used it in ages..
I've recently been using whitelabs san fran lager yeast which can handle temps upto 16deg (from memory) & have been sticking ice packs & a wet towel around the fermentor during the day.
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Re: James Squire Porter & Lager Yeast
According to its makers, the ideal temp for Saflager is 12C, although it will ferment down to 9C.Jay wrote:Also I think it's now cold enough at home to brew lagers under the house without the aid of a fridge (15 degrees during the day, 7 degrees at night). Is this to much of a deviation? Will my yeast quit overnight? Should I get a cheap fridge and thermostat and stop asking questions?
It should be fine under the house if you insulate it (wrap it in a blanket or quilt to prevent the wild temperature fluctuations).
This should save you from having to go down the path of buying a fridge (unless you want to, of course).
Cheers,
Oliver