Anyone know what kind of infection this is?
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No idea but it looks just like mine.
Anyone know what kind of infection this is?
![]()
No idea but it looks just like mine.
2brew1cup said:My two our bruins 2 years in.
It tastes like the blood of a dwarven warlord if that helps.
Anyone know what kind of infection this is?
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Barooze, I harvested a wild yeast from grapes and it made a pellicle like yours, I'm fairly sure it's a type of brettanomyces.
natural320 said:it is simply Costco apple juice and a harvested slurry of Wyeast 3068. I was going for a simple cider (like I've done many times before), but returned from a week long vacation to see that.
totally unintentional, I have no idea what it is, but a sample taste was only tart...not puckering sour or anything like that.
natural320 said:and I take it that it didn't look like this during your ferment, right?
Interesting. I did a spontaneous ferment for this one. Left it in the boil kettle overnight next to some rose bushes with cheesecloth covering the opening so maybe that's the driver here.![]()
I just read in The Art of Fermentation that yeast that makes a thready layer like this is know as Kahm yeast and it's common on the surface water of vegetable ferments like pickles or kraut. I'm not finding out a lot of information about Kahm yeast, or what sort of species it might be. Mine only made a thready pellicle like that when exposed to air.
When I tried the beer after it was fermented, it had a very weird, slightly unpleasant aftertaste I attributed to the wild yeast. It only went down to 1.026, but I mashed at 160 to ensure lots of food for the bacteria to eat over the next several months. The CO2 had a terrible odor during primary as well. You can still get a weird aftertaste from this one, but I'm hoping the souring really knocks it down. Time will tell.![]()
acidrain23 said:Foreign Extra Stout, with funky pellicle!
Is this Brett contamination? Lacto? Something worse?
Looks like brett and lacto. For some reason, I have done three brett beers and always get the same kind of rocky bubbles. I only get the white pellicle when lacto is added.
Cool, thanks! I was thinking about- either 1) knocking it back with some Camden tablets and pitching some fresh yeast, OR 2) let is ride and see what happens... I guess there is always 3) dump it and clean better next time! What should I do?
I'd definitely let it ride. It's now a historical beer! I'm sure many of the original FESs had some brett in them!![]()
acidrain23 said:Hah, cool- thanks for the reassurnaces. I'm going to taste a sample this weekend and if it doesn't taste like nail polish or baby vomit, we'll see what happens. Hey, maybe I'll even oak this bad boy.![]()
acidrain23 said:Cool, thanks! I was thinking about- either 1) knocking it back with some Camden tablets and pitching some fresh yeast, OR 2) let is ride and see what happens... I guess there is always 3) dump it and clean better next time! What should I do?
Sour Gruit, Dubbel grain bill brewed with Nettle, Mugwort, Marsh Rosemary, Sweet Gale, and Wild Yarrow.
Oak will feed the Brett and be delicious..
stubbornman said:Oud Bruin update:
Supplication clone:
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Pellicle on Citrus Sour Blonde Ale. Primary was brett blend propagated from a bottle of RR Sanctification. After primary, added 12.2 oz (by weight) fresh tangerine and tangelo juice (as well as the zest). This appeared ~3 weeks later.
Full recipe and notes here
No idea but it looks just like mine.
stblindtiger said:This is my second sour stout attempt. My first one turned out great, but trying to cut back the sour edge to it a bit so the roast shines through a bit more. When I pitched the Cal Ale yeast I also dumped dregs from about 5 different sour beers. It's been in primary for about 2 months now. Think the yeast cake will just provide food for the bugs, or should I rack it off the yeast cake/maybe only key it sit for 6 months instead of a year?
This is just the start of the pellicle forming....
A little closer up...