Search results for "white table sugar"
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CellarScience® CITRUS Dry Wine Yeast | Premium Wine Yeast
Cleaves (Chops!) thiols releasing citrus, passionfruit, grapefruit, floral flavors Ferment at 58-61 for maximum enzymatic activity #1 Choice for Sauvinon Blanc. Also good for Viognier Oh thiols, you elusive magical compound. Nice try hiding behind Cysteine-4mmp, but CITRUS sees you. Cleaving thiols from other compounds is what CITRUS does, releasing the classic citrus, lime, passionfruit, and floral flavors that help separate styles like Sauvignon Blanc and Viognier from ordinary white table wine. Also can be used with Chardonnay , other whites, and is great for Rose. CITRUS can ferment at cooler temperatures but the enzymatic cleaving activity is highest at around 56-60F. So if you like Zesty Grapefruit, lime, lemon peel, floral, and passionfruit flavors, CITRUS may be your yeast. This yeast is good and perserving acidity so if you are working with whites from a warmer region that can be particularly helpful. More on Thiols: Thiols are organic sulphur compounds that are resonsible for the most prized flavors in many white wines. 4mmp (black current), 3MH (Passion fruit, Grapefruit and Citrus) and 3MHA (Tropical Passionfruit, Rose) Start Time: Average Alcohol tolerance: 14%+ Nitrogen Demand: low Production of volatile acidity: Average Production of H2S: Average Production of SO2: Low Ease to Ferment with MLF: Good Optimal Fermentation Temp: 53–73°F (Ideal for enzymatic activity: 56–60°F) Proper yeast hydration helps ensure a healthy fermentation. For every gram of yeast, mix .25 g of FermStart yeast nutrient with 25 ml of sterilized tap water between 104–106°F/40–41°C. When water reaches 104°F/40°C, sprinkle yeast into water and stir gently. Allow the slurry to stand undisturbed for 15 minutes and then stir again. For every gram of yeast used add 25 ml of clean must to the yeast slurry and let stand 15–20 minutes. If necessary, use additional must to adjust yeast slurry to within 18°F of must temp before pitching. For a complete nutrient schedule sufficient for most fermentations, add 1.5 g of FermFed DAP Free per gallon of must at the first sign of fermentation and 1 g of FermFed per gallon of must after 1/3 sugar depletion. Download the PDF
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, by David Miller (Brewing Techniques) Hung Fermentations, Water Analysis Tables, and Eggs in Beer
Q and A with David Miller (Brewing Techniques)The BrewingTechniques troubleshooter helps one brewer solve a case of fermentations that just didn’t want to get going,...
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, by Dave Draper and Mark Hibberd (Brewing Techniques) Priming Bottled Beer for Consistency and Reproducibility
The Prime Directive by Dave Draper and Mark Hibberd (Brewing Techniques - Vol. 4, No.4) Carbonation level is one of the most readily identifiable features...
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, by MoreBeer Staff Increasing the Alcohol Content of Kit Beer
It’s All About Sugar and Yeast It’s the magic combination that turns ordinary fluid into the age old concoction that is alcohol. Let’s say you...
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, by MoreBeer Staff Gluten Free Homebrewing
Gluten comes from one the main ingredients in beer, it is a protein that resides in the malt we use. If someone has an allergy...
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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 Brian D. Wood A Belgian Golden Strong with Homegrown Persimmons!
By Brian D. WoodThe first thing coming across my mind as we planted yet another fruit tree (can one have too many?) was, what can...
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, by Jack Horzempa Brewing with Brettanomyces (Brett)
By Jack Horzempa The two types of yeast most associated with brewing beer is Saccharomyces Cerevisiae (ale yeast species) and Saccharomyces Pastorianus (lager yeast species)...
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, by Martin Lodahl & Roger Bergen (Brewing Techniques) Brewing in Styles: Belgian Trappists & the Abbey Ale
by Martin Lodahl & Roger Bergen (Brewing Techniques) Behind Abbey Walls One of the first beers to really astound me was Chimay “rouge,” now usually...
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, by Jack Horzempa Saison Beer
By Jack Horzempa Tis the Season I took four years of French in high school (which was many years ago) and since I never use...
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, by Ted Hogeweide Making Hard Cider From Apples
By Ted Hogeweide Quicklinks Apple Selection Equipment Needed Preparation & Proccess Basic Hard Apple Cider Recipe Hard Apple Cider As plants start waking up from...
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, by Jim Busch (Brewing Techniques) Brewing With Herbs and Spices
By Jim Busch (Brewing Techniques) Spice up Your Brewing with Ancient Ingredients Adherents to the Reinheitsgebot rules about barley, hops, yeast, and water as the...
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, by Dr. Adam Rich (Brewing Techniques) Bread: A Natural Companion to the Brewer's Art
There can be more than great beer at the end of a day’s play with agriculture’s primal elements. by Dr. Adam Rich (Brewing Techniques -...
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, by Hubert Smith (Brewing Techniques) Belgian's Magical Beers and People Revive One Man's Love of Brewing
Redemption of a Beer Lover by Hubert Smith (Brewing Techniques - Vol. 5, No.5) The small bar has just opened on a Sunday afternoon and...
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, by Martin Lodahl Making Hard Cider At Home
by Martin Lodahl (Brewing Techniques) Hard Cider Recipes & How To Make Hard Cider At Home Renewed Interest in the Forbidden Fruit Brings a Heavenly...
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, by Pete Slosberg The Road to an American Brown Ale
A learner’s beer? A bottled beer? A British style? An American style? All of those and more. by Pete Slosberg and Martin Lodahl column editor...
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, by Jason Dunson-Todd (Brewing Techniques) Beer from the Wood
by Jason Dunson-Todd (Brewing Techniques) From Ancient Past to Present, Oak Remains a Perennial Source of Special Character The use of wood, particularly oak, was...
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, by Ben Jankowski (Brewing Techniques) American Porters
by Ben Jankowski (Brewing Techniques) American Porters- Marching to Revolutionary Drummers From their earliest days in colonial experience, American porters have evolved separately from their...
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, by Martin Lodahl (Brewing Techniques) Lambic: Belgium's Unique Treasure
by Martin Lodahl (Brewing Techniques) Lambic: Belgium’s Unique Treasure But is it really beer?” The first taste of a lambic is almost always a surprise...
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, by Jim Liddil and Martin Lodahl (Brewing Techniques) Brewing Lambic at Home
By Jim Liddil and Martin Lodahl (Brewing Techniques) Practical Strategies for Brewing Lambic at Home Part I —Wort Preparation Lambic represents an irresistible challenge to...