Afaik, you are good.Is there any issues with any yeasts not fermenting at such a low pH or am i good to go ahead with something classic like s05?
Afaik, you are good.Is there any issues with any yeasts not fermenting at such a low pH or am i good to go ahead with something classic like s05?
I use s05 all the time, works great!!Is there any issues with any yeasts not fermenting at such a low pH or am i good to go ahead with something classic like s05?
Might have to call it pink or rose something something rather than my intended "salted plum..." something...![]()
Interesting. I had a "salted plum gose" from an Aussie brewer I loved, and hence wanted to try plums for the first time. Their plum flavour was quite strong and colour darker, but of course I have no idea of how much they used.I've got a peach+plum sour just about ready to keg at the moment. It's about the same colour! I'm also finding the flavour very subtle compared with other fruits I've used.
I use a bench trial for determining how much is needed. It only gets mixed into the batch once, and multiple teas/extracts would be added at the same time.How do you reduce oxidation risk of late adding adjuncts like this, mixing in, tasting, then possibly adding some more ...etc?
Can't you siphon it?I've considered to probably dump it while the girlfriend holes a sanitized screen per your warning RPh on the calcium debris.
A siphon is different than a spigot.The little 2 gallon bucket I'm using doesn't have a spiggot. Just a straight-up ol' food grade bucket.
I'm glad you have the same experience so I don't feel like I'm crazy. It tastes really sour with the calcium carbonate and I'm having a hard time coming up with a scientific explanation.
Yes, definitely a very high cell count. Your explanation isn't wrong, but there's a piece missing and I've got it now.In the end, you end up with lots of lactic acid, and hopefully, a very viable starter.
Hmm, maybe. I expect continuous agitation would increase the speed. However the calcium carbonate is really difficult to keep in suspension though, so I'm not sure pumping alone would be optimal. With that setup it's hard for you to realize how much is stuck to the bottom in your bucket because you can't see it -- I've done this in glass, so I could see it's really difficult to get it up into suspension.My guess is that if you had some sort of pump system hooked up, you could get by with far less than 10 days. My guess is the 10 days is simply to account that one needs to shake it--due that the calcium carbonate doesn't dissolve readily.
That’s because the lady takes care of all that stuff. Heat pads are a miracle for starting...and they do a good job at keeping containers +10F over ambient.
yeah she takes care of the potted stuff too. LOL
View attachment 674121
Yep. Doctor of Pharmacy and Board Certified Critical Care Pharmacist. I worked in a variety of areas in a 350+ bed hospital for a while and then in the emergency department for several years after I established clinical services there. Right now I'm a stay-at-home dad, more time to ponder the big questions about brewing.is RPh guy a pharmacist?
Radiology. I figured you had to have a medical background when you mentioned something along the lines evidence based practices awhile back.Yep. Doctor of Pharmacy and Board Certified Critical Care Pharmacist. I worked in a variety of areas in a 350+ bed hospital for a while and then in the emergency department for several years after I established clinical services there. Right now I'm a stay-at-home dad, more time to ponder the big questions about brewing.
What's your field of practice?
Sounds good! Hopefully the culture will now work on some of the dextrins in the main batch.View attachment 674843
Here's the post sour vessel. Ever since I had a pre-sour infection, I've been VERY sensitive to that hefe/sock infection smell. I thought I had picked up that smell here. Turns out, it's very likely just the smell of....sour liquid!
Put a sample in the refractometer to confirm...1.061. No infection....that's basically right where I estimated it at. My last "pre-sour" was .020 points lower than OG. That's a sign.
Lid underside....clean as a whistle...no infection. One sign of infection is seeing fragments (lack of scientific word here) all over the inside of the vessel, like it had a minor explosion. My last "pre-sour" had fragments everywhere inside of it.
My girlfriend..."IT SMELLS SOUR!"
It definitely tastes sour. I suppose even if you don't have an infection (all signs point to no for me, I just didn't care for the smell as I'm sensitive to any smells like it), then I suppose you need to expect any sour liquid that's been sitting out to not necessarily smell good.
Siphoned it all in. Left behind what you see.
Also: funny story. When we were souring the peach vessel, the girlfriend was pulling out the bag and noticed green colors from inside the bag. "Oh crap, that's mold!" We were about to dump it...then I said, "hey, do you remember that we used green colored marbles in the fruit bags?"![]()
This is a simple recipe for a nice sour tropical pineapple/ mango wheat ale.Is there a consensus on a good first recipe? Maybe a basic start to finish recipe to highlight the “good belly” sour goodness,
This is a simple recipe for a nice sour tropical pineapple/ mango wheat ale.
70% pale malt
30% white wheat malt
Target OG around 1.055. Mash around 150-155°F for single infusion.
Water: 0-40ppm sulfate, 50-100ppm chloride, 10-30ppm magnesium, 0-60ppm sodium.
Boil 45 minutes (or not)
Pitch WLP644 (or equivalent) and a small amount of GoodBelly together. Ferment around 70°F-75°F.
After it's finished, dry hop with 0.5oz Czech Saaz per 5 gal.
There's plenty of room to modify this to your taste and process. Cheers!