jcarson83
Well-Known Member
Getting ready to bottle today and opened the secondary to see this. Should I even bother?
I agree. Rack it to your bottling bucket and try a sample. Be careful not to get any of that white stuff into it. I've never seen anything like that.rod said:try racking from underneath the floaties and stop before it reaches your syphon
then taste it - if good bottle if nasty then dump.
good luck
EdWort said:My Haus Pale Ale looked like that and it turned out to be one of the finest beers I've ever brewed.
Classic example of a lacto infection. This usually is a result of sanitation. FYI, id get your beer cold as temp. can prolong the infection from growing until its not palletable any longer. Warmer temps will speed it up. It wont hurt you so dont worry about that. Also, if there was any grain dust from milling, this can cause it.jcarson83 said:Getting ready to bottle today and opened the secondary to see this. Should I even bother?
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I always use better bottles as secondaries and have never had a problem.Blktre said:I think there are some misunderstandings here on infections and type of material to secondary in. As far as secondarying, plastic is frowned upon for allowing o2 to seep in over time. Thats the main reason.
It doesnt matter what type of material is used to ferment in, a infection can get ahold of glass, stainless whatever. This is a sanitation issue number 1. Of course scratches can harbor bacteria. Scratches are harder to clean and sanitize. So please dont think that because you are using glass or stainless that you are protected, your not.
Glass, plastic better bottles, buckets, and stainless use what you like. Clean and sanitize well. Starsan imo, is the best sanitizer out there. The foam gets into places other sanitizers cant get to. It has a short contact time and can be bulk mixed/stored for future use. Clean and sanitize well, and you will greatly reduce if not totally protect yourself from infections....And dont use plastic for long term secondary....good luck......
edit: I have read that better bottles reduce the amount of o2 saturation over regular plastic. But, im still a glass secondary guy for sure!