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Post your infection

Discussion in 'Beginners Beer Brewing Forum' started by jcarson83, Jul 5, 2008.

 

  1. Westermans

    Well-Known Member

  2. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Mar 7, 2015
    Little bits of yeast & leftover krausen.
     
  3. v01gt

    Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2015
    Is this the start of an infection?? The white spots have me worried

    IMG_4353.jpg
     
  4. W0GWT

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2015

    Looks great! I wouldn't think that's infected.
     
  5. DisturbdChemist

    I'm drunk 60% of the time, all the time!

    Posted Mar 7, 2015
    Ill wait and see. If it taste alright ill let it sit. A local brewery makes a sour wee heavy and its amazing
     
  6. v01gt

    Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2015
    Ok, awesome! My first competition beer so I was freaking out a bit. Any idea what the white stuff is? I've seen the off white spots that are supposedly starsan, but these looked a little more pronounced. Thanks for the response.
     
  7. YoBombel

    Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2015
    [​IMG]
     
  8. W0GWT

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 7, 2015

    I don't know, maybe yeast rafts of something. When I rack after primary, there's usually something like that, but I haven't had an unintentional infection yet.
     
  9. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Mar 7, 2015
    that last pic looks like classic lacto to me. But the previous one IDK...maybe funky-shaped clumps of proteins? Not sure about that one?
     
  10. Snowden

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2015
    Any idea what these spots are? Just noticed them in a batch of Graham's English cider. It has been in secondary since the week before Christmas. Was thinking about bottling it soon. It smelled ok...haven't tasted a sample yet though.

    Sorry about the slight fuzziness of the photo and the glare...camera was having a rough go of it in the dark basement.

    View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1425827651.700906.jpg
     
  11. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Mar 8, 2015
    Looks like it could be yeast colonies on the inside of the carboy?
     
  12. Snowden

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2015

    Ah ok, that is a relief! Thanks!
     
  13. NYShooterGuy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 8, 2015
    Looks like yeast rafts
     
  14. sassafras

    New Member

    Posted Mar 10, 2015
    First post here. This was a porter brewed with PB2. It's about 2.5 weeks old in these pictures. This doesn't look like a normal infection. I'm wondering if it could possibly be some fat or something that separated from the PB2 mixture. Still tastes and smells fantastic.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  15. theck

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 10, 2015
    Never dump, taste before you do. Let it roll a little longer and give it a try.
     
  16. thejuanald

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 21, 2015
    This was a wheat beer made with a Kolsch yeast. It's been cold crashing for a few days. It might be hard to see but there is a lighter layer at the top. I know kolsch are top feeders and have low floculation so maybe it's just that?

    20150321_125402.jpg
     
  17. thejuanald

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 21, 2015
    Now that it's been sitting out of the fermebtation chamber for awhile, the layer seems to be getting wider. Is this an issue?
     
  18. chriwhit

    New Member

    Posted Mar 21, 2015
    Is this infected? I am brewing with White Labs Sour Mix that contains Brettanomyces, Saccharomyces, and the bacterial strains Lactobacillus and Pediococcus. So technically the answer is yes but I didn't think mold/pellicle woudl start forming in the primary. I brewed 6 days ago and its my first attempt at a sour

    IMG_5111.jpg
     
  19. BGBC

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 21, 2015

    Looks like krausen to me. No mold. No pellicle. Keep that baby shut.
     
  20. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Mar 22, 2015
    Looks like krausen is receding & that ring around the collar is forming around the edges to me.
     
  21. Patrick87

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 22, 2015
    Nope. Beer clears from the top-down. It's doing exactly what it's supposed to. Let it sit in there till the whole thing looks like the top layer.
     
    thejuanald likes this.
  22. thejuanald

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 23, 2015
    Thanks, Kolsch yeast is new to me. Every other beer cleared out real quick. Damned top eaters.
     
  23. Artifex

    New Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2015
    Orange globs in milk stout secondary fermentation?

    [​IMG]
     
  24. NYShooterGuy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2015
    Yeast rafts
     
  25. adamdillabo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 25, 2015
  26. peejaynj

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
  27. NYShooterGuy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    Pellicle
     
  28. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    Yeah, the 2nd one is looking more like a pellicle to me. The one above that just looks like a normal, albeit very active krausen.
     
  29. DisturbdChemist

    I'm drunk 60% of the time, all the time!

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    Sorry man. You have something in there. Brett/Lacto
     
  30. adamdillabo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    I hope you are right Unionrdr.
     
  31. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    Well, so far, there's nothing in there to indicate an infection.
     
  32. peejaynj

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    I'll post a picture of what my Carboy looks like tonight. But I've never had an infection before. What do I do if I've got Brett/lacto?
     
  33. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    I ha a bad lacto infection in my Maori IPA once. I sanitized the dry hop sack in Starsan too. Scooped out the nasty film & the dry hop sack. Since it was done fermenting & dry hopping, I racked it to the bottling bucket & bottled it asap. If yours is still fermenting, you'll likely have to let it ride. Bret can be another story, as it's used with ale yeasts to make Belgian sours.
     
  34. peejaynj

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015

    Well mine is a wheat beer and that's legitimately after one night of fermenting. Brewed it yesterday morning and started fermenting by 1 pm. So an infection really after not even 24 hours!? The bubbles just seem huge compared to other ferments I've had and I did everything as I usually do. Idk where I could've went wrong. But how am I supposed to scoop bubbles out of a Carboy?!
     
  35. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    I just scooped the gunk out because it was a bucket. Think about your whole process on brew day. Did you clean & sanitize everything that touched the chilled wort? Every little piece of equipment? What kind of water, if any, did you top off with?
     
  36. peejaynj

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015

    The only thing I can think of is maybe I didnt sanitize my funnel? Everything else was maybe I forgot that. But is my beer ruined or let it ride for the week and taste it? Idk what infections do to be honest!
     
  37. peejaynj

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015

    The only thing I can think of is maybe I didnt sanitize my funnel? Everything else was maybe I forgot that. But is my beer ruined or let it ride for the week and taste it? Idk what infections do to be honest!
     
  38. peejaynj

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
  39. Psylocide

    Ippons for Days

    Posted Mar 26, 2015
    It's too late to do anything now, but I seriously doubt that's an infection (based on the fact that you're 24 hours in). I've seen some pics of US-05 fermenting that looks just like that.

    RDWHAHB.
     
  40. peejaynj

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Mar 26, 2015

    Thanks, it's kind of a funky smell though. If it IS infected tho....what do you do? Just see how it tastes and go from there? Or dump and start over?
     
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