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My first Infected batch

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509inc

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Every bottle has these white bubbles and a filmy layer on top.

When I noticed this I died a little inside. All that time, effort and money down the drain.

I tasted it when I transferred to the secondary and it was perfect. The infection had to happen then.

I don't think I'll use a secondary again. Although 1 bad batch in 3 years isn't so bad.

:(
 
If it's white film mold, then it's okay to drink and it usually doesn't change the taste. It was probablly caused by an airborne mold. if that secondary is 3 years old, plastic, and has any scratches in it, then it might be pretty hard to sanitize.
 
If it's white film mold, then it's okay to drink and it usually doesn't change the taste. It was probablly caused by an airborne mold. if that secondary is 3 years old, plastic, and has any scratches in it, then it might be pretty hard to sanitize.

Safe to drink?!? Are you serious? I already dumped it. I didn't want to get the crupe and crude.
 
Yes it would be safe to drink. No pathogens will live in beer. If you saw the crud growing on lambics and wild fermentations you would probably swear off beer totally.
 
never dump the beer. sometimes you just gotta wait a while and let some flavors mellow. at least save it for company
 
hehe, I had a batch a while back before I got my own grain mill that came out pretty bad. I hopped it assuming .0070 specific gravity and only got .0020 or so. That was brought out of the cupboard whenever there was someone drunk enough to drink it at my house. Tasted like nuthing more than really bitter hop water to me but the drunkards didnt seem to mind it.
 
It's in the bottle? How do you know it's just not bottle krausens?

Carbing beer is similiar to fermentation in a fermenter...Yeast eats sugars and processes co2 and alchohol....Since ale yeasts are top fermenting, it works just like in your fermenter...Krauzens often get formed and then fall through to the bottom during the 3 week process... Some yeasts are more apt to do it more dramatically than others...and priming with dme sometimes makes it noticeable...

I actually have a theory that it happens all the time, but since a lot of us just stick our bottles in a box, in a dark place and forget about them for 3 or more weeks, (instead of staring at them obsesively), we never notice it occuring.

I actually finally saw one, but didn't have a cam to shoot it. I had bottled my saison, and I had a couple of these Italian Lemon bottles

ElegFood_00182.JPG


And I had put those two in the cupboard above my fridge, the morning after I bottled the two that were in those, both had krauzen on top...and 8 hours later they had fallen and become the sediment layer at the bottom.

I doubt your beer is infected, and I bet in a couple weeks when you pull your bottles out you wont even remember you saw them.
 
Safe to drink?!? Are you serious? I already dumped it. I didn't want to get the crupe and crude.

Well, sorry pal, you wasted 5 gallons of time and money on newb fear and superstition. for 1 thing nothing pathogenic can exist in beer, so even if it WERE infected, you wouldn't get the "crups and crude" whatever the hell that is.

I came across this from a pretty well known and award winning homebrewer railing against a fellow brewer (it was on one of those "color coded" brewboards where they are a little less friendly than we are.) I just cut and pasted it and stuck it in a file...here it is.

Can you get a PATHOGEN from beer. No. NO *NO* Did I make that clear? You have a ZERO chance of pathogens in beer, wine, distilled beverages. PERIOD!

Pathogens are described as organisms that are harmful and potentially life threatening to humans. These are some 1400+ known species overall encompasing viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and helminths. Of that group, we are only interested in those that can be foodborne. Quite simply, if it can't survive in food, it isn't in beer. That knocks out all but bacteria and fungi. Viruses need very specific circumstances to be passed around... like on the lip of a glass or bottle, not the beer in it. **Ahhh...CHOOO!**

Pathogens as a rule are very fastidious beasts. Meaning that they want very specific temperatures, acidity, nutrients and other conditions to thrive.

Bacteria that *could* live in wort, cannot survive even a little bit of fermentation. There are several reasons for this. One is in the 'magic' of hops. It is the isomerized alpha acids that provide a preservative effect to the beer, which happens to inhibit pathogens! Good deal for fresh wort!

Another reason is the drop in pH from fermentation. Next, yeast emit their own enzymes and byproducts, all in an effort to make the environment hostile to other creatures. The major one is alcohol, of course, but their enzymes will break down less vigorous organisms and they become sources of trace nutrition. Now the latter is very minor compared to the effect of alcohol, but it exists! Most of the time these enzymes work on the wort, not organisms until late in the process. Good deal for beer! ...uh, wine too.

Oh, Botulism specifically... did you know that this is an anaerobic pathogen? It's toxin is one of the few that is broken down by boiling. Did you know tht it is strongly inhibited by isomerized alpha acids, even in water? Since fresh wort has a healthy amount of oxygen in it, the beastie cannot even get started, then once the O2 is used up, it doesn't have a chance against the hops or the yeast.

All that is left are a handful of acid producing bacteria that'll ruin a batch of beer. Overall, there are less than 200 organisms that can survive in beer and lend flavor effects. None of these for very long, or very often. Lambic being the sole exception, and if pathogens *could* survive, that'd be the style where you find 'em.

Secondly, read this so maybe you won't be so foolish nextime and jump the gun.



You don't dump your beer, for making a minor little mistake. Your beer is hardier than that.

And you don't dump something because you think it's going to turn out bad. You only dump a beer that you KNOW is bad, and you give it at least a couple of months in the bottle before you even make THAT decision.

Read theses two threads that were compiled for nervous new brewers to realize that your beers are not a weak baby that is going to die if you look at it wrong.

https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f39/wh...where-your-beer-still-turned-out-great-96780/

https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f39/ne...virtue-time-heals-all-things-even-beer-73254/

Our beer is really resilient despite the boneheaded things we do to it. And even if something appears to be wrong, often time and the yeasties go along way to correct itself.

And if everyone dumped their beer just because of a common thing like an airlock suckback, no one would be brewing. We ALL have had sanitizer from our airlock get into our beer at one time or another. There's a ton of panic threads on here about that, and the answer is always the same, RELAX.

I think about it in terms of my time and money, I'm not going to dump 30 or more dollars worth of ingredients, 6 hours of brewing time, and at least 2 months from yeast pitch to cracking the first bottle, on what could be a minor mistake (that may not even harm the beer anyway,) until I have exhausted all probability that the beer won't improve. And even then that means at least walking away from the bottles for maybe 6 months or more.

And so far I have never beer wrong.

After all these years of brewing I still haven't had a dumper.

And I've made some big mistakes.

But I have never had a beer that wasn't at least palatable, after all that time.

They may have not been stellar beers, but they were still better than BMC or Skunky Beers in green bottles that people actually pay money for.

So just read those threads and next time, relax, and give your beer a chance to prove how strong it really is.

:mug:
 
I just racked a Kolsch into secondary that looked a lot like that. Had a wierd taste too. But I racked it and threw it in the fridge and there it will stay at about 42* for awhile. We'll see what happens. I just thought it was gunk that hadn't fallen. Can anyone identify this?
 
I tasted it. It tasted great for being room temp right before bottling.
 
Oh man, I know what you mean! Last week, I was at this bar and then later that night...oh, wait...you said "batch". :D

thats hilarious... although i don't think the doctor has a shot for this. this is actually a Harpoon Spring Maibock clone i bottled tonight. thats 2 batches in a row. I just dont get it. I clean and starsan the entire kitchen and every peice of equipment during every step of porcess.
 
2 of the guys in my brewclub brewed a lambic, and it got lost in 1 of their garages. 2 years later it was found. they bottled and aged it some more. shortly after that, they won a silver for saison with it
 
Is no one able to identify what is in the pictures?
 
Honestly I wouldn't drink anything that looked like that. If my brews don't look like something I'd expect to see poured at my local bar or restaurant I'd just toss it.

The top photos seem to show some hops floating around some pretty scary looking stuff.

The Screwy Brewer
 
Believe it or not flat and at room temp this tasted great. So I bottled it.
 
The surface of beer is often ugly, and perfectly normal. All you can do, and did do is taste it and bottle it. I've bottled uglier looking surfaces before. Some krausen remains are down right scary.

The thing to ALWAYS remember is nothing pathogenic can grow in beer, so even if it is an infected beer, it won't hurt us. It may end up tasting like crap, or it may be like a lambic or something that people enjoy, but it won't make us ill.

So, knowing that, then really, unless a beer smells horrid, vinegary, sour, and or taste that way (what we call Satan's Anus) then it's really best not to panic, and just proceed as if everything is fine. And in a few weeks check on the beer in the bottle.
 
After one week in the bottle I decided to have a taste. Of course the carbonation process is not complete, but this is 100% drinkable. I split the bottle with a friend and he asked for another. Enough said. Dumping this batch would have been a terrible decision.

The next taste will be in a week.
 
After one week in the bottle I decided to have a taste. Of course the carbonation process is not complete, but this is 100% drinkable. I split the bottle with a friend and he asked for another. Enough said. Dumping this batch would have been a terrible decision.

The next taste will be in a week.

good on ya, 509. glad ya didn't dump it. :tank:
 

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