NuclearRich
Well-Known Member
Did you read what the question was, that started this whole conversation?
Yes.... I did....
That's why I responded.
Doing the math isnt going to help you know how much lower the brett will take it, because you just dont know, especially when you add fruit. You can guess, but its a risk.If you don't put a lot of Brett into the priming solution and do the math between your estimated volumes of co2 and FG you can adjust your gravity of your priming solution and use a vial from WL, there there cultures are so small you shouldn't have to worry about bottles exploding.
Also, If you put a single cell of Brett in, you run the same risk as if you dump a lager starter of brett in. It is going to do the same work, it will take longer perhaps, but it isnt going to help your math. Don't think you know where the gravity is going by the trend on the hydro. Wait until its stable. There are too many variables with Brett to take shortcuts with guessing.
My personal preference would be to avoid bottle bombs and gushers. Do you really know how much sugar is in the fruit if you are going to not let it ferment out, and bottle? Sugar levels in fruit are an average, and especially variable if the source is a garden or small local farm. Not something I would mess with when talking about Brett secondary. Safety first, and a close second is not wasting beer that has potential to be delicious.
As stated, you shouldnt put Brett on a timetable because it does what it will. Research and your hydrometer are your best friends. You could leave it in there for years if you wanted.I'm planning on doing a Baltic or robust Porter, let it ferment out for two weeks with a london ale yeast, then racking to a secondary with the addition of rasberries and Brett, bruxellensis for a small noticeable brett characteristic... My question to you is, how long could a beer be left (with brett) in the fruit in a secondary carboy? Since Brett does like to take it's time in eating most of the residual sugars... I appreciate your answer
I disagree that the brett funk will overtake the rest of the beer's flavor, a baltic porter with raspberrise is going to have a lot going on, so the brett funk is going to need a lot to overcome those base flavors. First and foremost, after secondary for a good month or two, take gravity readings every week or two until it is rock solid stable. Then you could bottle as normal. If you plan to long term age it, err on the side of caution: heavy glass, for priming sugar use a formal calculation that accounts for temperature, beer volume, and is weighed by grams (or oz) not by measuring cup.