My only question is: why use Philly sour if you’re going to add bottle dregs? If I was to do it, I’d just go brett so I don’t have to deal with the potential for the very long aging time pedio often needs.tomorrow doing a red philly sour, based on the recipe posted from mike mad fermentationist.
will use first philly sour and then some bottle dregs.
some opinion about look for brett lacto pedio and more? or look just brett ?
my question is because lacto and pedio from dregs will maybe increase the sourness of the final beer, and only brett will help for a more complex beer.
someone try something like that¡?
My only question is: why use Philly sour if you’re going to add bottle dregs? If I was to do it, I’d just go brett so I don’t have to deal with the potential for the very long aging time pedio often needs.
My only question is: why use Philly sour if you’re going to add bottle dregs? If I was to do it, I’d just go brett so I don’t have to deal with the potential for the very long aging time pedio often needs.
If quick is your goal, only use dregs will brett with your Philly sour. Brett can taste good quickly. Pedio sometimes can, but other times it’ll be a diacetyl Bomb or get ropey and require a year+ to be drinkable.my idea is to do a relatively quick sour, but looking for more complexity that with philly sour is difficult to get. apart from that, here in argentina is not common to find fresh bottles of unpasteurized sour beers. i think that not fresh dregs will not be enough to ferment a 5 gallons batch. maybe i am wrong and every post is very helpful for me-
i am not in a hurry but i want to try with the speed of philly sour to acidify and look for some complexity with brett. with another batch (safale be 134 saison with femme fatale evil twins dreg) have a good experience, 4 months on secundary and improve good flavors.If quick is your goal, only use dregs will brett with your Philly sour. Brett can taste good quickly. Pedio sometimes can, but other times it’ll be a diacetyl Bomb or get ropey and require a year+ to be drinkable.
I'd say give it time and see how it goes. It might be fine, and (as long as you have good sanitation and there aren't any other bugs in there) it's unlikely to get any worse. You can always pitch more yeast later.. . . Should I wait and see? . . .
Anyone has experience with tolerance to heat (pitching too hot) on Philly Sour? My brewing buddy thought it was lactobacillus and pitched at 90°F (32°c)...
Remember that although we typically ferment Saccharomyces at 15-20°C, that's only to reduce off-flavours. It actually grows best at around 30°C, and can survive up to 40°C or so, although it varies from strain to strain. So there's a big difference between recommended fermentation temperatures and what a yeast can survive, particularly for a short while. Remember that in the wild, they have to survive the summer on a grapevine or fruit tree which in the Mediterranean might go up to 40°C, whilst waiting for the cooler temperatures of autumn when the fruit is ripe.
So don't assume that pitching warm will kill everything. On the other hand, Lachancea is generally a cold-adapted genus, there's a reason that the species used for brewing is L. thermotolerans!!! So if the recommendation is to ferment it at 20°C then it should survive 30-35°C for short periods but I would get nervous above that, or that temperature for prolonged amounts of time, you may get off-flavours or funny behaviour like not producing acid, or producing lots of acid.
Anyway, it sounds like it's worked for you, just thought it was worth noting the above for future reference.
I gave mine 2-3 weeks before racking across. I suspect it can keep going after poerceived finish.So I took a reading and at day 8 (after a couple days with no visible activity) I'm at 1015 (OG was 1038), about 60% attenuation which is low but not unheard of, and I'm guessing it still has a little way to go, even if not sure if it will reach target gravity.
Planning on racking on fruits today (saw a bunch of people say 8 days was a good place to start).
Smell is a little yeasty on the samples I took, but loads of red apple notes and it tastes fine. Also, when I split the batch in two, I shaked one of the fermenter less than the other in order to see how it would turn out, and indeed, the one I oxygenated most is right where I wanted it to be pH-wise: 3,25 , while the other sample is only at 3,5 (same density).
So I took a reading and at day 8 (after a couple days with no visible activity) I'm at 1015 (OG was 1038), about 60% attenuation which is low but not unheard of, and I'm guessing it still has a little way to go, even if not sure if it will reach target gravity.
Planning on racking on fruits today (saw a bunch of people say 8 days was a good place to start).
Smell is a little yeasty on the samples I took, but loads of red apple notes and it tastes fine. Also, when I split the batch in two, I shaked one of the fermenter less than the other in order to see how it would turn out, and indeed, the one I oxygenated most is right where I wanted it to be pH-wise: 3,25 , while the other sample is only at 3,5 (same density).
I pitched a packet of Philly Sour into 6 gallons of 1.065 wort a couple of hours ago. It was chilled to 65F before pitching, but it will stay in the garage at ambient ~76-80F for the duration of fermentation. Do I need to set up a blow-off tube with this strain? I read it is a slow fermenting yeast but would like to know if anyone else can comment on whether it is necessary.