No, not at all. I often do a multistep mash and plop Irish Moss in the boil, which both help. But to be honest, perfect clarity is never a must-have for me. I often enjoy a little residual chalk, graininess, and/or dusty yeast in the mouthfeel. I'm pretty sure that's an aspect of historical kolschbiers as well. But, I guess you'll have to judge the results against your palate.Manx Guy wrote:...Do the oats and unmalted wheat cause any clarity issues?...
Lots of good choices. Of course, the goal is a super-clean, lager-ish ale yeast, soft but rich German profile. For true-to-style BJCP contests and such, I recommend Weihenstephan 165/Wyeast 2565/BSI A-65 or Wyeast 2575-PC/White Labs WLP003/BSI-3 or Siebel Inst. BRY401. If you're just making beer you like to drink wthout all the fuss, then use what you know, Nottingham or Chico even. Ferment cool and cold-condition your bottles as long as you can bear. As we say, beer mostly makes itself, it knows what to do.Manx Guy wrote:...Which yeast do you use?...
Cheers!