drubes14
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- Nov 12, 2012
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Hi all - going to be doing a kettle soured, 100% brett brown ale in the next few weeks once I get my HERMS fully rigged up. I've been doing some reading on kettle souring to make sure I've got the hang of things.
It seems like the standard operating procedure for many is doing a quick boil once you mash to actually sterilize the wort, and the inoculating with lacto or other strain.
My gut instinct is actually to not sterilize, let the mash sit on the grain bed, and kettle sour at 90-100 degrees for 24 hours, and see what kind of bacterial expressions you might get it. I'm sure there's some diverse flora out there that could make some fascinating flavor profiles.
Wondering if folks had any feedback on kettle souring like this without actually sterilizing the wort?
It seems like the standard operating procedure for many is doing a quick boil once you mash to actually sterilize the wort, and the inoculating with lacto or other strain.
My gut instinct is actually to not sterilize, let the mash sit on the grain bed, and kettle sour at 90-100 degrees for 24 hours, and see what kind of bacterial expressions you might get it. I'm sure there's some diverse flora out there that could make some fascinating flavor profiles.
Wondering if folks had any feedback on kettle souring like this without actually sterilizing the wort?