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Reviews from White Labs:
"Used on an Imperial IPA .. " By: HomeBrewStuff.com Date: Nov. 22, 2009 Beers brewed: Imperial IPA Comments: Used on an Imperial IPA, began with a 1 qt (1.040) starter 3 days before brewday. OG of 11 gal batch was 1.097 FG after 14 days was 1.015 @ 70°.
"I'm happy that the gravity is lower ... " By: Joseph Date: Oct. 16, 2009 Beers brewed: English Barleywine Comments: This yeast saved my big beer. I think the original yeast, English Dry, got lazy as I did have 10% of the sugars from honey. It stopped at 1.040 from 1.110 and was just too sweet. So, I made a half gallon starter with wlp099 and it is now at 1.027 and still showing some activity. I'm happy that the gravity is lower, but ecstatic that the wlp099 did not destroy that flavor I love from the English Dry!
"Cool by usual method ... " By: Mick Yallup Date: May 6, 2009 Beers brewed: 20% Barley Wine Brewery name: Sleetmoor Brewery Comments: Mash overnight @ 63'c and sparge with minimum additional liquor to give twice final volume brew required. Bring to boil & reduce volume (by 50%) to (approx) required o.g. Add hops & boil for required time. Cool by usual method and pitch yeast. After initial fermentation add 2 pkts "dry beer enzyme" (to convert residual dextrose to fermentable sugars) and aerate with aquarium pump + airstone. Add 1 tsp nutrient/gall & ferment out, aerating as required.
"WLP007 more versatile" By: Alastair Hewitt Date: Oct. 16, 2008 Beers brewed: RIS, high gravity ale Comments: I stepped up WLP099 twice and pitched it in a Russian Imperial Stout. I pulled the slurry when the RIS was about 8% and pitched it into a 1.100 OG wort. This was oxygenated for about 3 hours with pure O2 at the beginning of fermentation. Fermentation was very active and I started sugar additions (blend of malt extract, honey, brown sugar). Fermentation started to slow after first addition and then stopped soon after second. Added more nutrients and additional oxygen, but no luck, the yeast can't take the current alcohol level (calculated around 13%). It looks like this yeast is not alcohol tolerant much beyond 13% ABV. I did a similar beer two years ago with WLP007. Aimed for 13% ABV and made it to 13.7%. This time I was going for 18%, but things have stopped with an FG of 1.070. Over $100 down the drain unfortunately. The RIS came out great. I did a small sugar addition to this and got to 10% with out much trouble. I don't see much difference between WLP007 and WLP099 for high gravity brewing. WLP007 has the advantage of being more versatile for normal gravity beers.
" ... had great results" By: joe Date: Feb. 22, 2008 Beers brewed: Barley Wine Comments: I brewed a barley wine with this yeast and had great results. It finished at 10%. My friend and family are begging me to brew it again.
"I would recommend WLP001 instead ... " By: Clay Brackley, Head Brewer, Sleeping Lady Brewing Co. Date: January 30, 2008 Beers brewed: IPA, Amber, High Gravity Wheatwine Brewery name: Sleeping Lady Brewing Co. Comments: I purchased a 7bbl of WLP099 and propped it up in a 5 bbl batch of Amber with a gravity of 15P. The Amber turned out awful, it was overattenuated and astringent with some autolysis flavors. This was immediately following fermentation. The IPA was a little better because the hops masked the astringency a bit but it still was not as good as my house yeast. I would not recommend this yeast ! for average gravity beers. It is a great attenuator of high gravity worts but it tastes bad. I would recommend WLP001 instead as it attenuates well, flocs better than 099 and tastes much better. I will never buy this strain again.
(Editor's note: WLP099 is designed to be used in big beers that need a lot of attenuation, and the big flavors from those beers match well with the yeast. Others have used in normal gravity worts and enjoyed the results, however).
FAQ for this yeast
(Find special tips for WLP099 here.)
Q: Hello! I read with great interest your write-up on WLP099 yeast. I wonder if any of your customers have tried to make a 25% sugar wine using this yeast? I would love to see their results (and process) if it has been published. A: People have, but we do not know of published recipes. Q: I have some questions concerning your high gravity tips: Can a hand-held blender be used for both the initial and subsequent aerations? A. This would not get good aeration; an aquarium pump with an inline air filter is better. Q. In a 25L batch, what weight of yeast and nutrient should be used? Which nutrient(s)? A. 1-3 vials of yeast would be good; 1 tablet of Servomyces. Q. What would be the best temperature to control to, to minimize impurities? At this temperature how long would you estimate it would take for completion? A. 75 degrees F would be good, which would take about 5-15 days to complete.
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