Bigsnake
Well-Known Member
Have a question about the discover of yeast. I know the discovery of the microorganism of yeast and what it actually is happened pretty recent in terms of history.
I'm mainly wondering, when did brewers learn enough about their beer to know how to get their beer to ferment without having to let it sit out in the open air for wild yeast to inoculate it? They had to know when they brewed the foam or the sediment on the bottom of their fermenters could be used to get other batches fermenting? Or that they could pitch part of a previous batch into their old batch to start fermentation?
I'm mainly interested in how the early Belgian Monks handled getting their batches fermenting in the early 1800s when they first started brewing there.
This is also me looking into why the Belgian monks decided, or anyone for that matter, to ferment in large, open fermenters? Since Belgian monks started brewing in the 1830s I figured at that time they would know enough that these were not designed to capture wild yeast and were probably more of a traditionally designed fermenter.
I'm mainly wondering, when did brewers learn enough about their beer to know how to get their beer to ferment without having to let it sit out in the open air for wild yeast to inoculate it? They had to know when they brewed the foam or the sediment on the bottom of their fermenters could be used to get other batches fermenting? Or that they could pitch part of a previous batch into their old batch to start fermentation?
I'm mainly interested in how the early Belgian Monks handled getting their batches fermenting in the early 1800s when they first started brewing there.
This is also me looking into why the Belgian monks decided, or anyone for that matter, to ferment in large, open fermenters? Since Belgian monks started brewing in the 1830s I figured at that time they would know enough that these were not designed to capture wild yeast and were probably more of a traditionally designed fermenter.