originally posted by Ken Schramm:
originally posted by Marc D:
originally posted by Keith M:
Interesting . . .
Enjoyed reading that, thanks.
I think the author did a great job.
Accurate and enlightening.
The piece on the C hops was good too.
"If your beer smells like you are at a Phish concert, that's Columbus"
One of my good friends is Dr. Dan McConnell. He ran YeastLab in the 90's. He made "brew naked" pale ales, in which two-row pale malt (only) was infusion mashed and hopped with a single hop variety, and fermented with a yeast starter grown up from a slant. It was a great way to get a handle on a yeast strain's fermentation kinetics and finished beer flavor profile. One variable in each category, nothing to hide behind. Great learning vehicles, those. If you plated them out, they also revealed a lot about your sanitation skills. We'd use Cascades for American styles, or East Kent Goldings for British ales. I still find a well made naked pale to be one of my favorite beers.