Substituting WLP001 with Belgian Golden Ale yeast in DIPA

Thu Jan 27, 2011 7:40 am

Planning on brewing a Double IPA, and I was wondering about substituing a Belgian Golden Yeast I have from my last brew instead of using WLP001. I am hoping this will contribute the esther profile I like in Stone's Cali-Belgi, and I would like to experiment repitching and changing things up a bit. As far as attentuation goes and fermentation, is there anything else I should think about adjusting if the recipe was written for WLP001? Is it as easy as just substituting one for the other, or is there something else I am missing. I know that it will change the profile of the beer considerably and Im ok with that. Thanks.
Jason.

tap:Alesmith IPA
carboy:Sour Blonde, Rye Saison w/Brett
bottld: Tripel A,Tripel B,Sour Blonde,Hef, Saison w/Brett
OnDeck:Brown Ale
Longtermferm:

"They think I do not know a buttload of crap about the Gospel, but I do!,"Nacho
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crashlann
 
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Re: Substituting WLP001 with Belgian Golden Ale yeast in DIPA

Thu Jan 27, 2011 9:27 am

hmmmm, thinking about flavors, wouldn't the banana and spicyness from the yeast kinda clash with the citrus and pineyness of the hops? You could bring the yeast flavors more into the background by controling your fermentation temps to the lower end and not letting it ramp up too much...

drinking my Belgian golden strong for lunch,
Alan
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Re: Substituting WLP001 with Belgian Golden Ale yeast in DIPA

Thu Jan 27, 2011 11:57 am

This is the basis behind Belgian IPA's like LaChouffe's. LaChouffe uses citrusy american hops (Centennial, Chinook, maybe Amarillo, if I'm not mistaken).

Some folks like this combination.
Others don't. YMMV. At the very least, it makes for a good experiment to see if you do.
-B'Dawg
BJCP GM3 Judge & Mead
"Lunch Meat. It's an acquired taste....." -- Mylo
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Re: Substituting WLP001 with Belgian Golden Ale yeast in DIPA

Thu Jan 27, 2011 3:27 pm

That was my idea. I definitely will keep it down in the mid 60s, maybe slowly up around 68F max toward the end of fermentation. I think racking to a secondary before dry hopping will be important. I definitely do not want overwhelming esther flavors, but I am so new this, it will really be one of my first diversions from a recipe. I like a lot of the Beligian IPAs, but some that I have spoken to think the clash of the Belgian flavors and the hi IBUs will not work well.
Jason.

tap:Alesmith IPA
carboy:Sour Blonde, Rye Saison w/Brett
bottld: Tripel A,Tripel B,Sour Blonde,Hef, Saison w/Brett
OnDeck:Brown Ale
Longtermferm:

"They think I do not know a buttload of crap about the Gospel, but I do!,"Nacho
User avatar
crashlann
 
Posts: 225
Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2010 11:32 am
Location: Temecula, SoCal

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