dwarven_stout
Well-Known Member
See, no one told me that I needed to get it hot.. Just freeze, that the cold would kill bacteria AND pop the sugar capillaries, Jerks..
Yeah, I grumble to myself every time I see someone say "Freezing will pasturize" when 1) pasturization requires heat by definition, and 2) the purpose of pasturization is to knock back spoilage bacteria to a manageable level, not eliminate them altogether. When I add fruit to beer, I remove debris, wash it, and spray it down with a campden solution before freezing to break the cell walls and only then add it to beer. This method has worked fine for me so far.
With the rise of sour beers, there seems to be people who think an accidentally infected beer is going to produce fantastic results.
I don't know that anyone said this beer was going to produce fantastic results. I know I said that if let sit for a while it would probably even be good in the end.
Wild yeast are hit and miss. Some will really trash your beer, but a lot of the ones that come off natural fruits aren't really anything to be scared of. Plenty of people on this forum have snagged their own yeasts from apple orchards, cherries, juniper berries, etc etc. The only way to know FOR SURE what will happen to that accidentally infected beer is to wait it out, and that's what we've advocated for in this thread.
That looks more like mold than a pellicle to me, but I'd need to see a better pic.
It doesn't look like mold to me. I've seen mold on a buddy's experiment that looked like a matted cover, though. I've had a brett pellicle that looked almost like cooked Top Ramen- this picture looks a lot like that + cherries.