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When brewing beer, many brewers use their yeast for many generations instead of buying new yeast every time. It seems that the limiting factor is that mutations in the yeast, or the growth of "wild yeast" can make a yeast strain less desirable at some point. For some brewers, this might be two generations, or it might be as high as five generations before going back and buying the known good yeast.
In the last couple years, I have been using a yeast strain called Kveik. It is faster (more aggressive) than other beer yeast strains, and it seems to be very tolerant of higher fermenting temperatures. It seems to me that this is an ideal yeast for most beer production, unless I want a specific flavor profile that needs a specific yeast.
My question is, if Kveik yeast is more active than other yeasts, including "wild" or mutated strains, can I expect that it will always dominate the reproductive cycle and stay clean through many generations? I hope that I gave enough background to enable an answer for a complex question.
In the last couple years, I have been using a yeast strain called Kveik. It is faster (more aggressive) than other beer yeast strains, and it seems to be very tolerant of higher fermenting temperatures. It seems to me that this is an ideal yeast for most beer production, unless I want a specific flavor profile that needs a specific yeast.
My question is, if Kveik yeast is more active than other yeasts, including "wild" or mutated strains, can I expect that it will always dominate the reproductive cycle and stay clean through many generations? I hope that I gave enough background to enable an answer for a complex question.