So I was making side by side batches last Saturday and inadvertently pitched American Hefeweizen yeast that I intended for a Prickly Pear Wheat Ale into a Denny’s Rye IPA. The two fermenters were side by side and I was tired - what can I say?
Should I proceed to dry hop this concoction? Thankfully the wheat ale is proceeding nicely with the incorrect yeast that was setup for the RyeIPA. That will get the prickly pear syrup in the secondary fermenter and probably turn out just fine.
Did you go ahead and ferment the Rye IPA at lower temp as if you had used chico or such? If so I assume that the hef yeast won’t express the clove/banana very much and maybe other than being cloudy it might come out close enough so go ahead and dry hop.
Yea, Midwest winter basement temps - low to mid 60’s. I will definitely taste a sample when its done chugging along, but I thought I would submit the question to hear from the troops on the dry hopping…
Word has it that AMERICAN Hefe yeast is essentially a Kolsch yeast, and you wouldn’t have had any bananana nor clove even if you pitched correctly. I’ve used WhiteLabs American Hefe yeast, and the beers turn out like Widmer or Pyramid.
You can ferment both cool and you’ll still have 2 nice beers. Nothing wrong with dry hopping as planned. You may actually find it to be a happy accident.