Nottingham origins

Tue Oct 13, 2009 6:28 am

One of my staples is an Ordinary Bitter which I use WLP005 to ferment. When I made my last batch, I poopped the lid off the jar of harvested yeast to make a starter, and it smelled like bandaids. So into the yard it went. But I don't really have a well stocked LHBS, so a replacement was gong to take a week to get in the mail and I had brewing plans. A friend had some Lallemand Nottingham he would sell me. I thought, "Sure! It's British, why not?"

So my recipe was exactly the same except for the yeast. Fermentation was strong and lasted about 5 days. I aged it on the yeast for three weeks like I always do, then kegged. The beer tastes nothing like I expected, and has a peculiar flavor to it, I would best describe as characteristic of Newcastle, a beer I don't really like. Other than it not tasting like I wanted, it is a fine beer, and my friends are enjoying it.

I'd always been wary of trying english brown ales because I expected them to taste like Newcastle. Having tried a few others, I find that they really don't, and are quite tasty. So I am starting to wonder if it's not the malt, and maybe it's a yeast derived flavor I don't care for? I looked around the web to see the commercial origins of this yeast. Even Lallemand's website is vague though. Anyone know where Nottingham comes from? Does Newcastle use the same strain, or a close relative of it?
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Brandt
 
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Re: Nottingham origins

Mon Oct 19, 2009 4:38 am

Up here in Canada it comes from Quebec, at least I have heard it has.
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Re: Nottingham origins

Mon Oct 19, 2009 3:48 pm

I don't prefer Newcastle either, and I have always chalked it up to the clear glass bottles which seem to lend an off rubbery flavor to the beer. It just never tastes fresh. Yet, if you have it in the keg, it is great. nottingham is a good yeast when you are in a pinch. It will ferment pretty cleanly for a variety of beers.
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brewinhard
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Re: Nottingham origins

Sun Oct 25, 2009 9:59 pm

the "off" flavors of newcastle brown ale are supposedly attributed to their fermentors being lined with slate, having a reaction with the yeast somehow. i guess the clear bottle may have somthing to do with it also
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Re: Nottingham origins

Mon Oct 26, 2009 1:24 am

You should try it in the can......always better in the can!


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Re: Nottingham origins

Mon Oct 26, 2009 3:40 pm

I haven't seen newcastle in the can. But I am ALWAYS game for good canned beer. I feel more confident with getting a fresh beer when I purchase cans.
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