← Back to all cultures
CULTURE

Brettanomyces (wild yeast)

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

The wild beer yeast — slow-fermenting, producing barnyard, horse-blanket, and funky-fruit aromatics; defines lambic, gueuze, and many natural ciders

Members 2
Type Single species
Significance Established

About this 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.

Microbial classification

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.

Key metabolic features

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).

Optimal conditions

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 using this culture

Working with this 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.

Common mistakes

  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.

Cross-references