unclepumble wrote:The yeast you choose to brew with is the single most contributory factor to what beer you get out of the bucket at the end of fermentation.
The chosen yeast strain provides 80-90% of the flavour profile for the brew and also what temperature it is fermented at dictates the final product, you can mess around with different malts etc but the yeast is the decider to what beer you produce,
I can't agree with that at all - if you use a load of roasted malt your beer WILL taste of roasted malt no matter what yeast you throw at it. Hops too - if you use a load of cascade it will taste utterly different to something with a few goldings. Within a narrow range of malt bills and hops e.g. BYOBRAAH resipes then yeast will be a massive influence on the less definable 'character' but a guinness-type stout recipe is going to taste like a stout and packed full of roasted flavours no matter what yeast you use in it - even with assertive yeasts such as belgian trappist or the like they would add a belgian character to a beer that would be front-and-centre a stout. Likewise hops - try Achouffe's 'Trippel IPA' for a great belgian twist on an American style IPA with tons of amraillo front and centre but the achouffe yeast providing a definite belgian touch/character.
To asser "yeast strain provides 80-90% of the
character of a beer" seems a fair assertion in that yeast provides both its own influence (which can be profound with assertive 'character' yeasts such as Belgian's or weissen yeasts) in balancing the malt and hops and adding its own signature - character is also less quantifiable than 'flavour'...
Stan Hieronymous's 'Brewing with Wheat' book has an excellent section on the effect of temp on the belgian and german weissen yeasts - fermentation temp is a BIG influence.
I do wonder if the reason why a lot of micro's brews are , to me, quite dull is the prevalence of Saf-04 / US-05 / Nottingham which bring either a single flavour in the case of saf-04 (the bready hint) or very little at all for US-05 and Nottingham? Beers brewed with classic yeasts which add flavour and balance e.g. Sam Smiths or Black Shep or Tim Taylors seem like much richer and deeper beers than those where it is JUST the malt/hops 'balance' with yeast adding so little... Just a thought/rumination.