Hi all,
Story goes like this:
On December 9th I brewed my first attempt at a Kolsch (used Bee Caves excellent recipe: https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f62/bee-cave-brewery-koelsch-33548/)
Hit estimated OG of 1.053 and pitched an appropriate starter of WLP029.
After two weeks I took a reading and it was down to 1.025.
Gave it two more weeks with occasional swirling of carboy and raising of room temperature, but it was still at 1.025, so I decided it was a stuck fermentation (been having problems with an inaccurate thermometer) and it was best to dump it.
But miracoulously, airlock activity started up again after a few days.
My initial thought was that this has to be an infection taking hold in the beer (the airlock activity was pretty rigorous) and that it was best to dump the whole batch.
I kind of forgot about the whole thing, and this weekend I changed my mind and decided to bottle it.
Bottled it yesterday and drew a good sample for tasting and measuring. The FG is 1.000 (measured with a refractometer and calculated via onebeer.net) Uncarbed and warm it gives of a delicious aroma of fruity yeast character (almost like the banananotes in a hefeweizen, just way more delicate) and a balanced hop bitterness.
The body is obviously a bit thin and watery, but will probably turn out ok when its carbed.
I tried really hard, but could not taste any off flavors or other hints of infection.
My concern is this: should I be worried about bottle-bombs as they carbonate due to the possibility of wild yeast?
I store them in my brew cabinet together with a lot of excellent home brew and a nice collection of belgian beer from my recent trips to Belgium, and had some troubles sleeping yesterday in fear of what might happen.
Story goes like this:
On December 9th I brewed my first attempt at a Kolsch (used Bee Caves excellent recipe: https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f62/bee-cave-brewery-koelsch-33548/)
Hit estimated OG of 1.053 and pitched an appropriate starter of WLP029.
After two weeks I took a reading and it was down to 1.025.
Gave it two more weeks with occasional swirling of carboy and raising of room temperature, but it was still at 1.025, so I decided it was a stuck fermentation (been having problems with an inaccurate thermometer) and it was best to dump it.
But miracoulously, airlock activity started up again after a few days.
My initial thought was that this has to be an infection taking hold in the beer (the airlock activity was pretty rigorous) and that it was best to dump the whole batch.
I kind of forgot about the whole thing, and this weekend I changed my mind and decided to bottle it.
Bottled it yesterday and drew a good sample for tasting and measuring. The FG is 1.000 (measured with a refractometer and calculated via onebeer.net) Uncarbed and warm it gives of a delicious aroma of fruity yeast character (almost like the banananotes in a hefeweizen, just way more delicate) and a balanced hop bitterness.
The body is obviously a bit thin and watery, but will probably turn out ok when its carbed.
I tried really hard, but could not taste any off flavors or other hints of infection.
My concern is this: should I be worried about bottle-bombs as they carbonate due to the possibility of wild yeast?
I store them in my brew cabinet together with a lot of excellent home brew and a nice collection of belgian beer from my recent trips to Belgium, and had some troubles sleeping yesterday in fear of what might happen.