Originally Scraped from a Dogwood in a Cemetery, This Yeast Knocks ‘em Dead at a Bucks County Brewery

By

Image via itsabrewlife.com

Philly Sour, a new beer yeast found in a Philadelphia cemetery and isolated in the brewing sciences lab at the University of the Sciences, is winning accolades from the local beer industry and beyond, writes Harold Brubaker for The Philadelphia Inquirer

The yeast is being lauded both for the sour flavor it gives the beer and the time it saves the brew house. Making sour beer usually requires a delay in the brewing kettle for bacteria inoculation or development in wooden barrels. 

Thanks to Philly Sour, this extra step can be skipped, shaving a full 24 hours off the time needed to bring a distinct tart to the yield. 

Free Will Brewing in Perkasie is among the Philadelphia-area breweries offering the new beer to great success. 

Kurt Grunwald, quality manager at Tired Hands (another user), tasted one of the trial batches four years ago when he was a student at the University of the Sciences. He recalled finding it hard to believe the taste did not come from the beer being soured in a wooden barrel, and he immediately reported it. 

“The university decided to move forward with commercialization,” he said. 

Read more about Philly Sour in The Philadelphia Inquirer. 

________

Editor’s Note: This post first appeared on BUCKSCO Today in April 2021.

Connect With Your Community

Subscribe for stories that matter!

"*" indicates required fields

This field is hidden when viewing the form
BT Yes
Advertisement