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Pellicle Photo Collection

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Soma said:
A pellicle is formed by brettanomyces, not lacto, and they don't spring up on the first day of fermentation. Looks typical of a berlinerweisse fermentation to me.

Disagree. I had a pellicle on a Berliner Weiss innoculated using yogurt, not grain.
 
I mashed as normal, raised it with a bit of boiling water to mash out, then let it cool to below 120F in my cooler with plastic wrap on the surface of the mash. Then added a tub of yogurt labelled with lactobacillus bulgaricus. It would drop to about 100F after 8 hrs then I'd add a little boiling water to raise it back up. After 3 days, I lautered and sparged and continued through a boil as a normal beer, except only 15min boil. The yogurt also had a streptococcus strain which added some ropey black culture in with the white webby lacto pellicle.
 
Have you tasted it yet Quaker? I regularly ferment pickles and peppers using the liquid from the top of greek yogurt and they all get powdery pellicles.
 
Powdery is a much, much better description. I made it back in May. The 4 plain bottles I kept of it were great. But I put the bulk of it on sour cherries for several weeks. The result of which didn't suit my tastes. I think the whole fruit added too much tannins to it. Once a gallon was gone from the keg, I topped it off with a 100% Brett L beer. It wasn't much better. I doubt I drank a gallon before I pulled it from the fridge. It's been sitting at room temp ever since. I haven't needed the keg, so it hasn't been dumped. I last tasted it on December 2nd. It might work well to blend with a sweeter brown or red ale base and immediately chill. That may happen or it may find the drain.
 
I forgot to mention the lacto was inadvertently carried over to the fermentation. I had done a short 15minute boil. I'm guessing I "contaminated" it with a spoon used to stir and aerate it. I fermented in my kettle. That's where the pellicle formed, not in the mash.
 
Who wants to take a stab at this thing?!

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sheepdawgg said:
Black mold equals bad mood. You should skim?

It doesn't look like black mold to me, more just black scum from dark wort atop a cap of bread dough.
 
This is my most recent saison that is a blend of Dupont bottle yeast, WY3724, WY3726, WL565, WL Trois, and a strain of lacto I isolated out of another culture that is hop tolerant. Well I think it's a lacto strain. I didn't get this kind of pellicle on the first beer I had the contamination but maybe this is a mix of the brett and lacto making this pellicle.
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Here is another saison I brewed back in August. I fermented it solely with lambic/gueuze bottle sediment I saved up from the last two years. I just did a direct pitch of maybe 2oz of thick resuspended slurry. There's the normal suspects in here. Cantillion, Lindeman's Cuvee Renee, some 3F, Hanssens, and anything else I felt fit the lambic/gueuze profile when I was drinking at home and had my mason jar handy.

IMG_20121229_210549_zps532550ca.jpg
 
Here is a couple of shots (sorry they are not the greatest only got my cell to take pics). This is the tart of darkness recipe but I pitched ECY20 bug county that has a whole lotta different critters in it. The first pic was 3 days after pitching and the next ones are a day or two after that. The last one is not even that close up.
IMG_20121225_151207_zpsf28e68a3.jpg

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Got a few more. The first is a hibiscus ginger saison with jolly pumpkin dregs. The second is a pale ale with Brett trois. The third is a golden with Brett c.

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Damnit, guys. I've got 7 sour/funk beers going right now and NONE of them have had a pellicle worth showing so far (some are approaching a year old now). The closest one is just a thin white film. Oh well, the pellicle is just part of the fun - at least they're tasting great so far.

:(
 
NB Grand Cru partial mash. After a year and a month this is what it looked like:

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Pulling the lid off the fermenter was like pulling a saddle of a horse....awesome. Taste was light and lemony sour.
 
yeah the currants have been floating on the top for like 5 months... the one on the left most of them did drop a couple weeks ago...the right...most are still floating...
 
Here's my saison after another week. It's down to 1.002 at this point so I'm going to get ready for bottling. I'd like to get the fermentor empty so I can use the same bacteria in a new dubbel recipe that I initially made unintentionally sour. Now my friend and I want to make a buttload of the sour dubbel. I added dry hops to this saison today and will be cold crashing it at the middle of the week. I will bottle and prime for like 3 volumes allowing the brett and whatever to bring up the rear.

IMG_20130106_114907_zps92d0da17.jpg
 
Here's my saison after another week. It's down to 1.002 at this point so I'm going to get ready for bottling. I'd like to get the fermentor empty so I can use the same bacteria in a new dubbel recipe that I initially made unintentionally sour. Now my friend and I want to make a buttload of the sour dubbel. I added dry hops to this saison today and will be cold crashing it at the middle of the week. I will bottle and prime for like 3 volumes allowing the brett and whatever to bring up the rear.

IMG_20130106_114907_zps92d0da17.jpg

It's so....beautiful!
 
smokinghole said:
Here's my saison after another week. It's down to 1.002 at this point so I'm going to get ready for bottling. I'd like to get the fermentor empty so I can use the same bacteria in a new dubbel recipe that I initially made unintentionally sour. Now my friend and I want to make a buttload of the sour dubbel. I added dry hops to this saison today and will be cold crashing it at the middle of the week. I will bottle and prime for like 3 volumes allowing the brett and whatever to bring up the rear.

It's perfection :cool:
 
zzN7s


Here is my flanders red at about 4 months. It's pitched with the Roe blend and some RR dregs.
 

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