I was told by a commercial brewer that they use a BRIX meter to more or less tell how much sugar has been consumed by the culture. I found one on Amazon for about $25 and it has worked out great.
I also wonder why trub and hop debris don't seem to have an effect on using a hydrometer to check OG with beer. Maybe because it's not truly dissolved? But that's a separate topic!
... I tried a few brix measurements during secondary fermentation and the readings did not change, yet the CO2 content was clearly increasing, so the sugar should have gone down. Any ideas whats going on here?
Assuming your brix reading were correct, it could still make sense that sugar content remained constant while CO2 content increased. A case like that could be explained by the bacteria (and not the yeast) being responsible for creating more CO2 by consuming alcohol.
I had not heard of the bacteria creating CO2 during ethanol consumption, is this correct?
I think you are correct that bacteria do not create gas when they eat ethanol. That's why you add sugar to carbonate, not alcohol.
Hey guys you are right, the yeast is responsible for the CO2 production. During the aerobic fermentation happening in Kombucha, the ethanol is oxidised to acetic acid by the acetic acid bacteria. As you can see in this equation (C2H5OH + O2 --> CH3COOH + H2O), there is no CO2 formed besides the acid, just water. Sorry about this confusion.
Hi I have already collected some data:
1- SG = 1.002, pH=7.3, T=20.0 oC (just tap water)
2- SG = 1.003, pH=6.3, T=23.9 oC (tea Without sugar)
3- SG = 1.036, pH=6.0, T=26.1 oC (tea With the sugar)
4- SG = 1.034, pH=3.8, T=25.0 oC (after mixing with starter solution)
5- SG = 1.034, pH=3.6, T=23.0 (5 days of fermentation)
The SG readings are already corrected by temperature. I might take a few more readings before bottling.
How exactly are the last 3 gravity readings useful? After a 5 day fermentation your gravity dropped by 0.002. What does this tell you?
Your pH after adding starter tea is 3.8? How much starter tea is that?
Very interesting data here!
The first reading shows that the water I use has slightly higher density than pure water (it makes sense to me, and it is good to keep in mind for potential alcohol level correction). By looking at the second one it seems that the tea solution increases a bit more the density of the liquid (but this could also not be the case because the error in my hydrometer is actually +/- 0.001 ). The third reading shows the increase in density due to sugar addition. But since the starter solution has very low sugar content the resultant blend (sweet tea + starter) has an overall density smaller than just the sweet tea, so far it still makes sense, right?
The fourth reading will determine your alcohol content (assuming that not acetic acid is produced). What is interesting to me is that 5 days after fermentation started, the sugar levels seems to be same as in day 1, which is hard for me to believe because I observed some CO2 already. I look forward to collect more data and hopefully at the end all makes sense, or perhaps not
Cheers