Search results for "US-05"
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Fermentis | SafAle™ US-05 American Ale | Dry Beer Yeast
US-05 produces clean and crispy ales with a well-balanced, neutral character Stays in suspension during fermentation for great attenuation Highly recommended for American ales and highly hopped beers Fermentis active dry yeast offers reliability, ease-of-use, and consistency to home and professional beverage makers across the world Formally US-56, US-05 is a strain of yeast that creates that classic American profile of clean malt, crisp taste, low diacetyl, and ability to ferment in a wide range of temps. Look for US-05 to be the next popular dried yeast. This yeast can be pitched directly, but if you prefer to rehydrate, the instructions are below. Sprinkle the yeast in a minimum of 10 times its weight of sterile water or wort (we suggest 4 oz) at 70°F to 77°F (21 to 25 °C). Do not stir. Leave to rest 15 to 30 minutes. Gently stir for 30 minutes, and pitch the resultant cream into the fermentation vessel. Attenuation: 78-82% Sedimentation Time: Medium Alcohol Tolerance: 9-11% ABV Optimum Fermentation Temp: 64-78°F Like Fermentis US-05 yeast? Then you will love CellarScience® CALI Yeast! *See the technical data sheet below for more information on rehydration, usage and storage.
$6.79 - $109.99
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CellarScience® CALI Dry Yeast | American Ale | Premium Beer Yeast
CALI is the classic American ale strain famous for its clean, neutral flavor and its ability to be used in nearly any style A quintessential house strain that will allow malt and hops to shine Designed to be sprinkled directly onto the surface of your wort with no pre-oxygenation before pitching required Ferment between 59-72°F CellarScience offers high-quality yeast that is easy to use, consistent, and available at a tremendous value The classic American ale strain that has a long history of producing amazing beers. Famous for its clean, neutral flavor and its ability to be used in nearly any style. The reason this is the most popular strain in homebrewing and craft brewing is that it allows malt and hops to shine. You can never go wrong with CALI. Like all CellarScience yeast, CALI is eligible for direct pitch straight into your wort. CellarScience provides 12g of yeast per sachet, which is up to 9% more than any other brand of dry yeast. Every batch of yeast is PCR tested to ensure quality. CALI has been selling to pro breweries for awhile but was just recently packaged down to sachets for homebrewers. Dosage: One sachet is enough to treat a 5-6 gallon batch. When calculating for larger batches, use at a rate of 2-3 grams per gallon of wort. We recommend rounding up by one full sachet rather than measuring out the yeast exactly. Direct Pitch or Rehydrate: CALI yeast is designed to be sprinkled directly onto the surface of your wort with no oxygenation required in the initial fermentation. Our aerobic growth process makes this possible by creating dry yeast with high viability and high sterol levels. CALI yeast is pre-loaded with essential nutrients to ensure a successful, complete fermentation. While not required, some brewers prefer to rehydrate yeast. To hydrate yeast, first, sanitize the yeast brick and scissors. Use 10 grams of sterilized tap water between 85-95°F (29-35°C) mixed with 0.25 grams of FermStart per gram of yeast. Sprinkle yeast on the water. Allow the slurry to stand undisturbed for 20 minutes, then swirl. Use small amounts of wort to adjust to within 10°F (6°C) of wort temperature before pitching. Ferment between 59-72°F (15-22°C). Optimum Fermentation Temp: 59-72°F Flocculation: Medium Alcohol Tolerance: 10-11% ABV (WY1056 11%) Attenuation: 75-84% Similar Strains: WLP001, WY1056, US-05 Gluten-free CellarScience Yeast: For years liquid yeast has been sold as the higher quality option but times are changing. Yes, 20 years ago dry yeast was made by bread yeast producers and the quality was not as good as liquid yeast. CellarScience is helping to flip that script with a full lineup of high-quality dry yeasts. Cell count and viability is usually higher than commercial liquid yeast pitches, which vary from pouch to pouch and don't ship well. CellarScience yeast can be pitched directly in most batches of wort, offering significant time savings. Yeast that is quick and easy to use, high quality, and available at a reasonable cost adds up to a tremendous value. Quality yeast that doesn't "break the brink". CellarScience Nutrients: For high gravity ferments consider rehydrating yeast with CellarScience FermStart yeast hydration nutrient. For high gravity or low nutrient wort, feed your fermentation with CellarScience FermFed DAP Free complex yeast nutrient mix.
$4.99 - $74.99
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Anchovy | Experimental 24B-05 | Pellet Hops
Imparts notes of sweet watermelon candy, bright raspberry, and subtle pine Performs well in IPAs, Pale Ales, and other hop-forward beer styles Aroma Profile: Watermelon, Raspberry, Pine Alpha Acids: 12.6% T-90 Hop Pellets Anchovy Hops (formerly experimental variety 24B-05) are a recently developed hop from Segal Ranches in the Yakima Valley. This dual-purpose hop provides distinct aroma and flavor that include sweet watermelon candy, raspberry, and pine. With an average alpha acid content of around 12.6%, Anchovy Hops are suitable for bittering additions but are particularly effective when utilized for aroma and flavor contributions in later additions, whirlpool, or dry hopping. Recommended for use in IPAs, Pale Ales, and other hop-forward beer styles where a unique fruit and resin profile is desired. Hop Statistics Alpha Acids: 12.6% Beta Acids: 3.6% Alpha-Beta Ratio: 3.5 Total Oil: 1.61%
$2.99 - $187.99
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Farro Glass | Premium Wine Bottles | Bordeaux | Antique Green | 375mL | Case of 24
This smaller Bordeaux bottle offers the classic shape in a size that's half the volume Antique green glass color is often preferred for red wines to protect them from light during long term storage Farro Glass offers a full lineup of the most essential and commonly used bottles in winemaking A half volume option for the most popular wine bottle in the world. As the name suggests, the Bordeaux bottle (also known as a Claret bottle) originates from the Bordeaux region of France. Easily identified by its wide shoulders and straight body, this bottle style comes in a variety of colors and is suitable for a myriad of wine styles. Brown and dark green are commonly used for reds to protect them from light during long storage periods, while light green and flint are most often used only for white wines that will be consumed much sooner after bottling. These 375 mL bottles are excellent for pricier beverages, or when you want to make sure you're going to finish the bottle without having to open a full 750 mL bottle. Volume: 375 mL Style: Bordeaux / Claret Use: Sangiovese, Tempranillo, Merlot Color: Antique Green Finish: Cork Bottom: Punted Case QTY: 24 Pallet QTY: 84 cases Our Farro Glass Wine Bottles offers a full lineup of the most essential and commonly used bottles in winemaking. We scoured the world to find a bottle source that could provide a quality product consistently and at a fair price that we can pass on to our customers. If you've been searching for reasonably priced bottles that are reliably in stock, look no further.
$25.49 - $1,648.99
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Five Star | STAR-XENE | 5 Gal
Stabilized chlorine dioxide, best known for being economical, convenient, and excellent in CIP applications Must be activated with Citric Acid Prior to sanitization, remove all gross food particles and soil by use of a pre-flush Available in 5 gal
$785.99
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The Olicana® Single Hop Experiment | 5 Gallon Beer Recipe Kit | All-Grain
Our Single Hop Experiment series is the perfect way to learn the characteristics of individual hop varietals Includes a small bittering addition of Magnum and three 2 oz additions of your chosen hop for late boil and at dry hopping Estimated ABV: 5% Estimated IBUs: 35 Makes 5 gallons of finished beer We recently had a simple, yet exciting idea: What if we brewed the same recipe, used the same yeast, but changed one thing - the flavor, aroma, and dry hop additions using one hop varietal. That way we could take two beers that are close to identical and pick out the differences in just the hop flavors and aromas! And thus, the Single Hop Experiment was born. This recipe is based off of a simple Pale Ale: 2-Row, Crystal 15L, Magnum bittering hops, and then a single other hop for the rest of the additions. The malt in this recipe is basic and fairly neutral, the bittering clean and consistent, but the flavor and aroma from the late hop additions will vary; sometimes dramatically! Ever wanted to know what your favorite hop really is? Brew a few of these different Single Hop Experiment recipes to find out! Estimated Original Gravity:1.049-54 SRM (Color Range): 7-8 IBU's: 35 Estimated Alcohol Percentage: 5% Our recipe kits DO NOT include grain bags, yeast or priming sugar. The recommended yeast(s) can be found below. All grains will come milled, unless you select unmilled base malts. WLP001 - White Labs California Ale WY1056 - Wyeast American GY001- GigaYeast NorCal #1 IYA07- Imperial Flagship OYL004 - Omega West Coast Ale I DY26- Fermentis Safale US-05
$34.99
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, by Jack Horzempa Fixing Under-Carbonated Bottle Conditioned Beer
By Jack Horzempa When bottling homebrewed beer via the bottle conditioning process there are two main issues which can result in bottles that are under-carbonated:...
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, by Jack Horzempa The Right Tools for the Trade
By Jack Horzempa Preface: Whether to brew via Extract (and specialty grains), Partial Mash or All Grain is a tradeoff. There is an old saying:...
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, by MoreBeer Staff Dry Yeast vs. Liquid Yeast
I know quite a few brewers who view liquid yeast as the “next step”. Their initial learn-to-brew kit, like many others, probably came with dry...
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, by MoreBeer Staff Do I need to re-hydrate dry yeast?
We all have seen or heard the horror stories about a dry yeast packet taped to the top of a malt extract can with directions...
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, by Jack Horzempa Recipe Formulation for a Balanced Beer
By Jack Horzempa Introduction In my recent article about Witbier I mentioned the word “balance” many times since achieving balance is very important for this...
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, by Henry Gustavo Gonzalez Using Wine Concentrate in Brewing
Brewing with Wine Concentrate: The Pinot Porter By Henry Gustavo Gonzalez Hi, my name is Henry and I love: beer, wine and everything related to...
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, by MoreBeer Staff How to Make Alcoholic Ginger Ale
Alcoholic ginger ale is gaining popularity today, but has been around for centuries. Long before Not Your Father’s Ginger Ale in the United States, Crabbie’s...
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, by MoreBeer Staff Barleywine Basics and A Recipe
The term Barleywine (also known as “Barley Wine” in the U.K.) is somewhat of a misnomer. Containing no fruit, it is actually a very strong...
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, by MoreBeer Staff Creating A House Beer: The Pale Ale
There’s something about having a brew that you know well, is easy to make and most importantly that you and your friends like enough to...
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, by Jack Horzempa Brewing with Wet (Fresh) Hops
By Jack Horzempa What are the differences between wet hops and dried (kilned) hops The hops that we typically use when homebrewing our beers have...
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, by Jack Horzempa Oktoberfest Beer & History
By Jack Horzempa Oktoberfest & the Celebration It all started with a wedding and a HUGE party. In October 12, 1810 the Crown Prince Ludwig...
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, by Cale Baldwin Gluten Free Brewing
By Cale Baldwin Gluten Free BeerAs time passes it becomes harder and harder to remember a time when the term “gluten free” wasn’t embedded into...
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, by MoreBeer Staff All Grain Brew Day: Crush to Pitch
OK, so you want to try all grain. But what goes into an all grain brew day? There are two basic methods of mashing grain,...
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, by MoreBeer Staff 60, 90, or Otherwise: Finding the Best Boil Times
Award-winning beer comes from a 60-minute boil. So all brewers should boil for 60 minutes. Guess what? The same can be said for 70 minutes,...
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, by Joe Smahl My First Homebrew!
By Joe Smahl Extract Brewing in 12 Easy Steps Fill kettle with water, add steeping grains in mesh bag, and turn your burner to high....
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, by Ricky Alexander Brewing Fruited Sours
By Ricky Alexander It was the mid-90s in the Midwest. Patterned colorful shirts and baggy jeans were all the rage. The cool kids all cut...
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, by Jack Horzempa The Benefits of Homebrewing over Buying Beer
By Jack Horzempa There is a myriad of good reasons to homebrew your own beers and below are some of them. Click each reason to...