A Guide To Blending Yeast Strains
A Guide To Blending Yeast Strains
A Guide To Blending Yeast Strains
Yeast Strains
KARA TAYLOR
WHITE LABS SAN DIEGO, CA
ANALYTICAL LAB MANAGER
NHC 2014 - GRAND RAPIDS
Outline
•History of blending yeast strains
•What are the benefits of yeast blending?
•Ways to improve fermentation performance and
flavor complexity
•Looking at data for a few fermentations
•Drink beer!
A little history about blending yeast
Exponential Stationary
Lag Phase Death Phase
Phase Phase
Producing flavor compounds
In 72 hours most flavor compounds are formed. 50% of
carbohydrates are fermented with in 48 hours
◦ Adding yeast later than 72 hours is unlikely going to add to the flavor and
aroma of that beer
Goal 1: Enhanced Flavor Profiles
Add two different Hefeweizen yeast to soften the ester and increase the
phenolic characters
Brewery in Florida
Brewer Comments:
3 Day Fermentaiton, first feneration
Not re-pitched
Very balanced flavors, good phenolic , nothing overbearing. Balanced and more
complex than previous batches using WLP300. Banana flavors were not as
strong and other phenolics balanced the profile.
Reference: Chris White’s Using Single Yeast Strains in a single fermentations poster at CBC 2003
Goal 1: Enhanced Flavor
Profiles
Another Brew
WLP380 WLP830
Weizen dunkelbock by a brewery in Madison, WI
Hefe IV German
OG 18.3-5.0 Lager
70% 30%
Ferm temp: 63F ramped to 68F
1 blended yeast addition
Comments: Good weizen flavor, diminished as the yeast flocculated out
Would do 60/40 blend next time
Goal 2: Improving Fermentation
Performance
Finicky yeasts
◦ WLP565 Saison Ale Yeast is known to be finicky
◦ Add WLP565, then 2 days later add WLP500 to help finish the
fermentation
Low Attenuation Yeast
◦ WLP002 English Ale Yeast and WLP007 Dry English Ale Yeast
together to get the esters and higher attenuation that you
want
Goal 2: Finishing a beer
WLP5019 WLP001
Brewery in San Diego Gravity 1.094-1.030 1.030-1.014
Champagne yeast
◦ Popular to add champagne yeast to finish a beer that didn’t
ferment to the desired finishing gravity
◦ Hardy yeast used to dealing with harsh environments such as
high alcohol content, low nutrient
◦ Not a lot of esters production, some phenols production
◦ Champagne yeast will not metabolize maltotriose
◦ Some are a “Killer Yeast”- will outcompete brewers yeast so
don’t repitch!
Things to take into consideration when blending
yeast for stuck fermentations
WLP5019 was too malty for their IPA but liked the flavor profile.
Added the WLP001 to help dry out the beer
Blend gave desired profile, and in this instance was used for 5
generations. #3 was ‘perfect’. Generations 4 & 5 produced desired
flavor and attenuation, even though data shows (in next figure) a
change in collection percentage.
What happens to the flavor if the yeast proportions
change?
So why is the flavor and attenuation staying the same but the proportions
changing?
There’s millions of cells in solution. In generation 5 you still have,
for example, in a 1.050 beer 1,800,000 cells/ ml. (12 million cells/ml total,
WLP001 is 15% of the total cells)
Chris White’s Using Single Yeast Strains in a single fermentations poster at CBC
2003
Thanks to Chris Graham and the MoreBeer staff for making all of
the beer for my talk!