Abstract
Norwegian kveik are a recently described family of domesticated Saccharomyces cerevisiae brewing yeasts used by farmhouse brewers in western Norway for generations to produce traditional Norwegian farmhouse ale. Kveik ale yeasts have been domesticated by farmhouse brewers through serial repitching of the yeast in warm wort (>30°C) punctuated by long periods of dry storage. Kveik yeasts are alcohol tolerant, flocculant, capable of utilizing maltose/maltotriose, phenolic off flavour negative, and exhibit elevated thermotolerance when compared to other modern brewer’s yeasts belonging to the ‘Beer 1’ clade. However, the optimal fermentation and growth temperatures (Topt) for kveik ale yeasts and the influence of fermentation temperature of the production of flavour-active metabolites like fusel alcohols and sulfur compounds (H2S, SO2) are not known. Here we show that kveik ale yeasts have an elevated optimal fermentation temperature (Topt) when compared to commercial American Ale yeast (SafAle™ US-05) and that they produce fewer off-flavours at high temperatures (>30°C) when compared to commercial American Ale yeasts. The tested kveik yeasts show significantly higher maximum fermentation rates than American Ale yeast not only at elevated temperatures (>30°C), but also at ‘typical’ ale fermentation temperatures (20°C-25°C). Finally, we demonstrate that kveik ale yeasts are heterogeneous in their Topt and that they attenuate standard wort robustly above their Topt unlike our control American Ale yeast which showed very poor apparent attenuation in our standard wort at temperatures ≫ Topt. Our results provide further support that kveik yeasts may possess favourable fermentation kinetics and sensory properties compared to American Ale yeasts. The observations here provide a roadmap for brewers to fine tune their commercial fermentations using kveik ale yeasts for optimal performance and/or flavour impact.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.