Craft Beer & Brewing Magazine

Whalez, Bro.

- By Ansis Puriņš

From the darkest depths of fermentati­on, we summon the vile (Wildbrew Philly Sour, cont. from p. 12) bacteria—that happens to produce lactic acid. In this case, it’s neither Sacch nor bioenginee­red but a species of Lachancea isolated from nature by the University of the Sciences in Philadelph­ia.

How it works: The beer should finish in the more moderate 3.2–3.5 ph range in about 10 days; its optimal temperatur­e range is 68–77°F (20–25°C). The appeal is in its simplicity: one yeast to pitch, just as you would any other. Then you end up with, as Lallemand says, “refreshing acidity and notes of stone fruit.” It is also said to produce high attenuatio­n, high flocculati­on, and good foam stability.

I received a sample from Lallemand, and I tried it recently on a 10-gallon (38-liter) batch of wheat beer—essentiall­y a Berliner weisse wort, going for a svelte 3.5 percent ABV. I rehydrated and pitched the Philly Sour, then gave it two weeks to ferment at about 72°F (22°C). Sampling from the spigot a few days before we go to press, the beer is clean and lemony—softly tart, not sharply so. It’s simple but delightful—a lawnmower beer in the making, akin to a gentler kettle-sour.

Now that I’ve kegged half the batch, I’m pondering what to do with the other half, to add some wrinkles—maybe pitch some Brett, or add a load of fruit, or both—because that first part was just too easy. —JS

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