Quote:
Originally Posted by Delaney
maybe you don't understand...
I am thinking about racking to secondary after 7 days in primary fermentor, and then immediately racking a new batch of wort onto the week-old yeast cake.
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Sours like to stay on the cake. the Brett feeds off the dead sacc.
I would suggest racking the beer, and then swirling up the cake to a slurry, and adding about half of it to the original beer and racking the new beer onto the other half. That way both get some of the cake, both get lots of bugs.
The beers will do fine sitting on the cake. The Brett counteracts the autolysis effect by feeding off the dead yeast.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Delaney
note that the first generation of beer was 36 IBUs...I'm thinking maybe I should add some lactobacillus, or will it grow from the original yeast cake, despite the high IBUs of the first beer?
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Both Lacto and Pedio will not propagate (and therefore will not create lactic acid) in worts with high IBUs. I think 36 is way too high for anything you might have. I don't think it kills it, it just doesn't propagate. Adding more lacto will not change the IBUs, so will be pointless. I don't know what the practical threshold is, but there is a reason they say to limit the IBUs in Sours to 10.
I'd suggest trying to add the dregs from a couple of bottles of JP beers. They have a couple that have decent IBUs and seem to sour OK. I think any JP beers will do, I believe all their barrels have the same bugs.
I'm sure the commercial brewing strains can work in low IBU worts, but when making a Berliner Weisse, I found the Lacto I was using to sour the wort (Acidophilus) will not work if there are any hops in the wort.