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FermcapS rock!!! Pic

Discussion in 'General Homebrew Discussion' started by zanemoseley, Mar 15, 2009.

 

  1. #41
    Jipper

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    I just got off the phone with one of our suppliers, and they say that the reason for the "increased hop utilization" disclaimer from the manufacturer is mainly for commercial breweries that have ultra-violent fermentations, where the krausen is blowing off via the blow off tube and being lost onto the floor. The krausen has a lot of alpha acid in it, and by using FermCapS (Foam Control) you can retain that krausen, and thereby retaining those bittering units.

    Short story - it won;t affect your AAU% unless you normally get a lot of blow off. It adds nothing to your beer, it just prevents AA loss.
     
  2. #42
    GilaMinumBeer

    Half-fast Prattlarian  

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    I expect the same goes for the boil.

    It's kinda interesting reading about this stuff. Through a quick Google I read that once it get cold enough it can be formed into a ball and bounced.

    Yummy!

    It's also said that it does not get absorbed by the stomach or intestines.I can see the mid winter posts now.

    "After a night of homebrew and walking home through a blizzard, I crapped a Super Bouncer"

    Hey, at least it doesn't glow in the dark, right?
     
  3. #43
    olllllo

    []-O-[]  

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    I was right.....FTW!!!!11!
     
  4. #44
    carnevoodoo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    Am I weird for not wanting this stuff anywhere near my beer?
     
  5. #45
    HSM

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    Not at all.

    A little dab of ear wax will have the same results but I don't want that either.
     
  6. #46
    giligson

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    It's very hard to find this stuff in Canada - most LHBS don't have it. And most mail order places say they can't ship it to Canada.
     
  7. #47
    Denny's Evil Concoctions

    Grande Megalomaniac  

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    When I have used simethicone I just got cheap generic version of gas-x extra strength and threw a cap or two in the carboy.
     
  8. #48
    FlyGuy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    Say what? I have bought it from Morebeer.com and either Alternative Beverage or AHS. Nobody gave me any hassle about shipping it to Canada. That's just plain weird. :p
     
  9. #49
    FlyGuy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    Nervous brewer. Not weird.

    :D:D
     
  10. #50
    lamarguy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    Good to hear someone has used the generic version available at a local pharmacy! I assume your beer turned out well, great head and all?
     
  11. #51
    HSM

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2009
    Thanks Wikipedia:

    Simethicone is generally available over the counter under many trade names in varying dosage sizes, including:

    Air-X (Thailand)
    Antiflat [1][2] (Austria)
    Mag77
    Baby's Own Infant Drops
    Deflatine
    De-Gas
    Disflatyl
    Espumisan
    Flatulex
    Gas Relief
    Gas-X
    GasAid
    Gasvan (Serbia)
    Genasyme
    Imodium Multi-Symptom Relief (formerly Imodium Advanced)
    Imogas
    lnfacol
    lnfacon
    Kremil-S
    Lefax (Germany)
    Little Tummies
    Maalox Anti-Gas
    Maalox Max
    Minifom (Norway, Sweden)
    My Baby Gas Relief Drops
    Mylanta Gas
    Mylanta Gas Relief
    Mylicon Drops
    Ovol
    Phazyme
    Rolaids
    SAB Simplex
    Simeco
    Telament (South Africa)
    Triaerom (Peru)
    WindEze (UK)
    Gas-Med
     
  12. #52
    Jipper

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2009
    If you get the Maalox, and you grab the cherry flavor and put it in your stout, would that qualify for a cherry stout?
     
  13. #53
    Jipper

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2009
    I gotta think there are more ingredients in the stuff that is meant for consumption than the stuff that is meant for the beer.
     
  14. #54
    carnevoodoo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2009
    Nothing to do with nerves. It is more like, "yeah, I've got my barley, my hops, and my simethicone in there..." Makes it seem sort of, tainted I guess. I'm not all reinheitsgebot or anything, but It just seems dirty to me.
     
  15. #55
    HSM

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2009

    Please don't lose that feeling! ..EVER! :)

    What is there in the new internet brewing world that couldn't produce me a very good *if not better* batch of brew 20 years ago? (answer: verly little).


    I'm sure that beer made with baby diarrhea medicine is better than regular beer. Maybe beer made with not **** medicine is bettarrr?
     
  16. #56
    Denny's Evil Concoctions

    Grande Megalomaniac  

    Posted Mar 26, 2009
    Yes.

    Just make sure what yo are using isn't a combo of simethicone and anti-acid.
     
  17. #57
    noisy123

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 20, 2009
    I used the simethicone from the baby drops in my IPA yesterday after trips to find the antifoam drops at my LHBS's were unsuccessful. I used 1.5 drops per gallon. I tasted a drop and it seems pretty innocuous.

    It seems to be doing a good job. I was a little late getting it in there and so I lost about 1/4 gallon to blow-off. I would suggest adding it before you pitch or shortly thereafter. I will report back with any negative effects if I see any.
     
  18. #58
    Boerderij_Kabouter

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 20, 2009
    You guys do realize that this stuff isn't in your beer, it precipitates out immediately if it is not being actively stirred. It does not dissolve into the beer or wort. It doesn't make the beer better or worse, it just makes it not all over your floor. Or you could spend an extra butt load of cash for a massive size kettle so you never have to worry about boil overs. I'll take the $5 bottle.
     
  19. #59
    giligson

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 20, 2009
    Ok I tried the stuff - I am never going back to NOT using it !
    closest source was Ovol gelcaps - cut into the cap with a knife and you get about 5 drops of the pure flavourless otherwise unadulterated simethicone (kind of convenient having a unit dose container actually).
     
  20. #60
    Denny's Evil Concoctions

    Grande Megalomaniac  

    Posted Apr 20, 2009
    Cheapest to get the no-name brand version. Make sure it's the gel caps or drops and not the chewable tabs, as they have antacid etc in them.
     
  21. #61
    Mutilated1

    Beer Drenched Executioner

    Posted Apr 20, 2009

    It sort of makes sense that it might make hop utlilization better if you added it during the boil though. If the wort doesn't foam up then the hops don't get stuck to the side of the pot so more hops stays in the wort - maybe thats how it works ? Of course thats pure speculatoin on my part - I've never used the stuff.

    I don't really see how it could help in the fermenter though. At least help as far as make the hop utilization better.
     
  22. #62
    Denny's Evil Concoctions

    Grande Megalomaniac  

    Posted Apr 20, 2009
    If hop resins aren't being shot out the blow off tube then you don't lose them.
     
  23. #63
    edstirling

    Member

    Posted May 5, 2009
    The anti-foaming activity is from reduced surface tension. It's the same concept as when you use akali cleansers to clean your equipment, lower surface tension makes it feel slippery and allows better "wetting" of the surfaces. Simethicone would allow better wetting of the hops in your boil. So your hops wouldn't get trapped in foam at the top, but would also allow water to soak into each flower more completely. It might also help in the mash when you dough in, and help prevent stuck sparge, or help you deal with hard water. I wonder whether it would contribute/hinder channeling during the sparge... I'm not sure about in the fermenter though. If you've got problems with too much blow-off then sure, but usually a tall krauzen is good 'cause it lets you remove some tannans. Maybe in the secondary to off-gas and push O2 out. Wikipedia has a long list of all products that include simethicone, Gas-X and rolaids etc.

    :mug: Is it better to have friends between beers or beers between friends? :tank:
     
  24. #64
    EdWort

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 7, 2009
    I'm a fan.

    [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJtKqWZod1g]YouTube - Boiling Robust Porter Wort[/ame]

    [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D83VCUrJ9Aw]YouTube - Yeast Starters[/ame]
     
  25. #65
    Brewme

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
  26. #66
    Scut_Monkey

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    I used some fermcap in my Pyrex flask starter yesterday. Oh man was it awesome. Normally it's like trying to control a volcano of boilover but this time it was me trying to control my need to do something as it required not attention. Awesome product and only required 1 drop.
     
  27. #67
    Tonedef131

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    I kind of don't like the idea of this stuff in my beer either, I know how it works and everything I just don't like using anything I don't have to. I never have boilovers and rarely do I have blowoff, so it's not that big of a deal to me.

    However, every time I make starters they boil over and it was getting to the point that I hated making them. So I got me some of this stuff and I tell you what, I will never make a starter again without it no matter how much I dislike the idea.
     
  28. #68
    olllllo

    []-O-[]  

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    ^^ If i can sum this up: Working with a milky white viscous substance puts you in an uncomfortable place, but you will work with it in confined places.

    Dude you are in Prison.
     
  29. #69
    TexLaw

    Here's Lookin' Atcha!  

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    I've used Fermcap-S for about 15 years and swear by it. I don't like adding weird things to my beer, either, but this stuff completely settles out and does nothing except avoid messes. I've recommended it without hesitation many times, and I continue to do so.


    TL
     
  30. #70
    GrizlyGarou

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    Possibly in the feremnter, the krausen rises up and the remaining hop particles stick to the sides, but without the foam more stays in the fermenting wort longer?

    10% isn't really all that much. It's not like it would be the difference between a heffe and an IPA. I suppose if you split a batch in half and put the fermcap in once fermenter but not the other, there might be a slight difference to someone that is really focused and experienced in judging the IBU when drinking a beer but I doubt I'd notice 10%...
     
  31. #71
    Tonedef131

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    I like to squirt a full dropper all over my face if that tells you anything...
     
  32. #72
    MacBruver

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    This stuff is awesome. I boiled 7.5 gallons in my 8 gallon pot on a SQ14 burner- it was a SOLID boil. Not a single boilover!!! I didn't get any pics of that brew day, but next time I will. Of course by then i may have my keggle...
     
  33. #73
    Scut_Monkey

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    Lol..... Hilarious. You are getting added to my sig.
     
  34. #74
    Scut_Monkey

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    There you go Tonedef! See below.
     
  35. #75
    Tonedef131

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    Scut Monkey's sig: The Hall of Shame
     
  36. #76
    weirdboy

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    I'm pretty sure Baby Gas-X is FDA approved...
     
  37. #77
    Sithdad

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2009
    Did a quick google search and came up with this from Medicinenet.com

    BRAND NAME: Phazyme; Flatulex; Mylicon; Gas-X; Mylanta Gas

    DRUG CLASS AND MECHANISM: Simethicone is an anti-gas (anti-flatulence) medication. It acts in the stomach and intestines to change the surface tension of gas bubbles, enabling smaller bubbles to join together into bigger bubbles. In this way it is believed that gas can be eliminated more easily by belching or passing flatus. Simethicone was approved by the FDA in 1952.

    Here is the drug facts from the Infant Gas-X box http://www.gas-x.com/pdf/infantdrops-label.pdf
     
  38. #78
    passedpawn

    Some rando  

    Posted Oct 29, 2009
    Fermcap-S is far, far cheaper than buying the simethicone equivalents at your local drug store.
     
  39. #79
    Hermit

    fuddle

    Posted Dec 1, 2009
    This is late, but two things. First is your pot. If it bows up in the center and creates a pocket it will trip the sensor. Second, I've seen new stoves come with bad sensors in all burners. They will tell you it is the pots though.
     
  40. #80
    Myke_J

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 25, 2009
    Just another one to add to the "FermcapS rock!!!" thread. This a little less then 7 gallons in a 7.5 gallon pot.

    [​IMG]
     
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