CULTURE

Brettanomyces (wild yeast)

Nom scientifique: Brettanomyces (anamorph) / Dekkera (teleomorph); species include B. bruxellensis, B. anomalus, B. claussenii, B. custersianus

La levure sauvage de bière — fermentation lente, produit des arômes de basse-cour, de couverture de cheval et de fruits funky; définit la lambic, la gueuze et de nombreux cidres naturels

Membres 2
Type Espèce unique
Importance Établi
Avis de traduction

Le texte principal de cette page est disponible uniquement en anglais dans la v1. L'interface et les métadonnées sont traduites en français. La traduction éditoriale est prévue pour la v2.

À propos de cette culture

Brettanomyces — colloquially 'Brett' — is the dual-identity yeast of fermented beverages. To conventional brewers and winemakers, it is a contamination organism that ruins batches with off-flavors. To traditional Belgian lambic brewers, natural cider makers, and the modern sour-beer movement, it is the defining microorganism that creates flavor profiles unobtainable by Saccharomyces cerevisiae alone. The difference is intentionality: an unintended Brett contamination in a clean lager is a defect; Brett fermentation in a Cantillon lambic is the point.

The genus has multiple species relevant to fermentation: B. bruxellensis (most common, named for Brussels and the lambic tradition), B. anomalus, B. claussenii, and B. custersianus. The teleomorph (sexual reproductive stage) form is named Dekkera; modern taxonomy uses both names somewhat interchangeably, with Brettanomyces preferred in food-science contexts.

Metabolically, Brett is slower than Saccharomyces but more tolerant of low-sugar, low-nutrient environments and of alcohol concentrations (up to 13-15% ABV). It can ferment sugars that Saccharomyces cannot — including dextrins and other complex carbohydrates that survive the primary fermentation by ale or wine yeast. This is the lambic mechanism: primary fermentation by Saccharomyces produces a beer that still contains dextrins; Brett then slowly ferments these residual sugars over months to years, producing CO₂, ethanol, and the characteristic aroma compounds.

The signature aromas come from 4-ethylphenol (clove, smoke), 4-ethylguaiacol (medicinal, bandage), and various esters. At low concentrations these add complexity; at high concentrations they overwhelm the beer. The 'barnyard' character is universally recognized but not universally loved — fans of the style find it transcendent; conventional palates find it off-putting. The split is generational and regional: Belgium and parts of the natural-wine world embrace Brett; large-scale American beer culture (until the craft sour-beer boom of the 2010s) treated it as a defect.

Brettanomyces is famously persistent. It can survive months or years in dry conditions, in barrel wood, in piping, and in fermentation vessels. A single contaminated piece of equipment can recontaminate every subsequent batch processed through it. Traditional lambic breweries (Cantillon in Brussels, Drie Fonteinen in Beersel) have Brett populations established in their cool-ship spaces over decades or centuries — these populations are part of the cultural heritage of each brewery. New breweries entering the sour-beer space face years of building up their own Brett communities.

For home fermenters: working with Brett requires either dedicated equipment (separate vessels, plastic, and tubing for Brett batches that never contact non-Brett batches) or commitment to a Brett-house style throughout. Commercial Brett cultures are widely available (White Labs, Wyeast, Lallemand) but a known Brett batch can persist and contaminate later non-Brett attempts in the same equipment.

Classification microbienne

Domain Eukarya Kingdom Fungi Phylum Ascomycota Class Saccharomycetes Order Saccharomycetales Family Pichiaceae Genus Brettanomyces (anamorph) / Dekkera (teleomorph). Species: B. bruxellensis, B. anomalus, B. claussenii, B. custersianus, B. naardenensis.

Caractéristiques métaboliques clés

Slow but persistent fermentation. Can metabolize dextrins and other complex carbohydrates inaccessible to S. cerevisiae. Higher alcohol tolerance (up to 13-15% ABV). Produces 4-ethylphenol (clove/smoke), 4-ethylguaiacol (medicinal/bandage), esters (fruity but funky). Custers effect: requires oxygen to begin fermenting glucose (unusual among fermentation yeasts).

Conditions optimales

Temperature: 20-30°C optimal; tolerates 15-32°C. pH: 3.0-7.0 (highly tolerant). Oxygen: prefers aerobic conditions to initiate (Custers effect), then can ferment anaerobically. Alcohol tolerance: 13-15% ABV, higher than most ale yeasts. Sugar requirements: very low — can ferment in nutrient-poor environments where S. cerevisiae stalls.

Ferments utilisant cette culture

Travailler avec cette culture

  1. Use dedicated equipment for Brett work — vessels, tubing, and plastic that won't be used for clean batches. Brett contamination is essentially permanent in porous materials.
  2. Allow long aging — 6 months to 3 years for full Brett character development. Faster ferments under-express the Brett profile.
  3. Use oak barrels for traditional Brett-driven beers — wood provides micro-oxygenation and substrate variety that drives complex Brett expression. Stainless steel works but produces flatter profiles.
  4. Pitch alongside or after primary Saccharomyces — Brett works on residual dextrins after primary fermentation; pitching alone produces stuck early fermentations.
  5. Monitor specific gravity over months — Brett's slow attenuation means gravity continues to drop for a year or longer; bottle only when stable.

Erreurs courantes

  1. Mixing Brett and non-Brett equipment — Brett survives in plastic, tubing, and barrel wood essentially indefinitely; cross-contamination is nearly certain.
  2. Treating Brett as a primary fermenter — it works best after Saccharomyces has taken the initial gravity drop.
  3. Bottling too soon — Brett's slow attenuation continues for months; bottling at wrong specific gravity produces over-carbonated or bottle-bomb bottles.
  4. Confusing Brett's intended barnyard with truly spoiled batches — Brett aromas are funky but recognizable; truly spoiled batches smell putrid or vinegary.
  5. Pasteurizing finished Brett beers — kills the live culture and removes the slow-evolution character that defines bottle-conditioned Brett products.

Références croisées