brianpablo
Well-Known Member
I made a nut brown ale about a week ago, chilled it to about 65 and pitched with rehydrated Nottingham. Nothing happened for nearly four days, until I started to see signs of krausen forming. Now there's a nice healthy crop of krausen on the top, but I just got a really strong whiff of acetone coming out of the airlock. I'm assuming the fermentation lag may have risked an acetic bacteria contamination, which I'm guessing is what I'm smelling. The temperature gradually rose during the four days of non-fermentation, and had reached about 74 by the time the krausen was forming. That's hotter than I'd like it to be but doesn't seem to be an obvious reason for an acetone problem. I've cooled it down to about 72.
I've seen some threads about Nottingham being slow to take off, but none seemed to mention this particular consequence. My instinct is to leave it, but I don't get the sense that the acetone smell goes away ever. Would help to know if there's any specific post-infection treatment to keep this sort of thing from coming back.
Thanks.
I've seen some threads about Nottingham being slow to take off, but none seemed to mention this particular consequence. My instinct is to leave it, but I don't get the sense that the acetone smell goes away ever. Would help to know if there's any specific post-infection treatment to keep this sort of thing from coming back.
Thanks.