Post by BaloononPost by JoergSince more than three months all the brew supply places I checked list
BE-256 as out of stock. Why is that when the other Fermentis yeast
strains are widely available?
I just used my last pack. Is there another dry Abbey yeast that behaves
comparably?
I did a quick search and saw one place refer to it as discontinued, but I
don't know if it's their designation or something coming from Fermentis.
Per Fermentis it is still in their active product line-up:
https://fermentis.com/en/fermentation-solutions/you-create-beer/
I just wrote to them, hoping better good news. Keeping fingers crossed.
Maybe President Macron is sanctioning the US by not giving us BE-256
anymore :-)
Post by BaloononThere are several other dry yeasts listed as Abby style but I haven't tried
them. I've found even dry yeasts which are supposedly the same strain from
different companies aren't identical, so I would treat them as only rough
approximations until proven otherwise.
https://www.homebrewersassociation.org/forum/index.php?topic=28289.0
I never had sulphiric undertones with BE-256. That is strange.
Post by BaloononI've made a number of Belgian style wheat beers with T-58 and I like it, so
I don't have any reason to believe Belgian dry yeasts are bad, but I
suspect they have much wider variations than, say, dry lager yeast.
Yes, I've also brewed with T-58 (same as you, Belgain Witbier) and it's
ok but for Belgian Tripel and Quadrupel I'd rather have BE-256 or very
similar. Preferably I'd like not to experiment with those higher-class
beers. Aside from losing around $50 worth of ingredients it's also 4-5h
of time going into such a beer.
Next week I'll brew a Tripel but I set my brew schedule database so that
I can harvest some BE-256 from a Patersbier that is in primary now.
Usually I follow all that with a Stout and a 3rd yeast harvesting. I am
probably on the UK's naughty list for using Abbaye yeast for
British-style beer.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/