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Pulque/Octli brew

Discussion in 'Fermentation & Yeast' started by julioohara, Aug 8, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    julioohara

    Active Member

    Posted Aug 8, 2012
    Hi everyone at Homebrew talk, I'm new to this chat forum and I am eager to learn as much as possible :ban: I have read in part of aforum posted here about an aztec drink called pulque. The recipe came out a sometime ago in a issue of BYO, and curiosity got the best of me since I remember trying this drink a long time ago and I liked it very much. The recipe calls for: 8lbs of Agave syrup, and Wyeast 1056 (American Ale) yeast for a 5 gallon batch, but I narrowed it down for a 2 gallon. However because I only had a Wyeast Belgium Abbey II strain I used that instead hoping of achieveing a partially sour brew like the traditional pulque. It's been 2 days in the incubator @ 69F, and I have not seen a Krausen... My question is, is a krausen necessary to demonstrate healthy yeast activity, or can a fermentation still take place in its absence? I have no airlock since it's a small fermentor that I got from Mr. Beer, so what would all of you suggest?
     
  2. #2
    JordanC

    New Member

    Posted Aug 25, 2012
    There will not be any krausen from the agave.

    I have never used an ale yeast to make pulque, only wine yeasts, and there has never been a strong sign of fermentation. All I notice is a small fizzle of bubbles on the surface edges (and I have an airlock that goes tic tic). The fermentation is not aggressive and it takes about two months before my gravity drops from 1.078 to 1.010

    If I were you I would be patient and check the gravity after a few weeks. I use wine yeast and let mine sit for months and months.
     
  3. #3
    julioohara

    Active Member

    Posted Aug 27, 2012
    I've seen wine yeast on a local hombrew shop, I will try that next time as well :) by the way have you ever tried to brew pulque with a lambic blend? I believe it has 2 strains of yeast, a lactic acid producing bacterium and something else that is supposed to kinda give it an authentic taste... Would like to know how that turned out if you've tried it :rockin:

     
  4. #4
    julioohara

    Active Member

    Posted Aug 28, 2012
    One more thing :D Did you rack to a secondary fermentor? If so, at what week did you do so? Or did you leave the pulque in the yeast for those 2 months :confused: Thanks, I appreciate the help!!
     
  5. #5
    Clifton

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 22, 2012
    I left it in primary for about 5 weeks. Then kegged. I preferred it lightly carbed. It was good with a few drops of lime juice too.
     
  6. #6
    Nokitchen

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 3, 2012
    So how's it coming along? I'm considering doing exactly this.
     
  7. #7
    AndrewD

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 3, 2012
    Does it turn out white like traditional pulque? According to wiki, pulque is fermented by bacteria, not yeast.
     
  8. #8
    julioohara

    Active Member

    Posted Oct 4, 2012
    Still sweet, but it's still fermenting as I see CO2 still present, gonna give it 2-3 more weeks and then I'll take a gravity reading; tastes like sweet fermented pear (just to give u an idea :cross:

     
  9. #9
    julioohara

    Active Member

    Posted Oct 4, 2012
    Apparently not this one, the agave nectar I bought was amber color, so it turned out with a pale-amber color (SRM in between 1 and 2, it's around that ballpark) the original pulque is made from the sap of the maguey plant, which has a milky white color to it and yes it is open fermented :ban: I live across the border and I found a place where they sell the actual aguamiel of the maguey plant, im gonna try that next instead of the store syrup and I'm going to replace the ale yeast with a Wyeast Lambic blend instead to stay on a closer traditional style :rockin: cheers!!

     
  10. #10
    Clifton

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 5, 2012
    Mine was milky white. I used Madhava light nectar.
     
  11. #11
    AndrewD

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 5, 2012
    I wonder if you could cultivate an authentic culture from a commercial pulque.
     
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