DisturbdChemist
I'm drunk 60% of the time, all the time!
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Pic will help

Belgian Blonde with what I believe to be a Brett Pelicle. I got a little careless and used this bucket for a Brett Saison the batch prior to this one. Not what I was hoping for out of the blonde, but it's tasting pretty damn good. I racked a gallon off onto some ECY Bug County for the hell of it.
Nice!
By the way, not to digress, but, how well do yeast cakes from sours work when you rack fresh wort, or wort off primary yeast cake? Kinda curious. Just bought my first ecy01 culture. Would love to try some bug country if there is a way to trade or something
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Pitch on top of it, add some us05 if it is old.
Nice!
By the way, not to digress, but, how well do yeast cakes from sours work when you rack fresh wort, or wort off primary yeast cake? Kinda curious. Just bought my first ecy01 culture. Would love to try some bug country if there is a way to trade or something
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[ QUOTE=Wingston75;6125050]Hi all,
Great thread! I've brewed and am fermenting a flanders red and a lambic (pics below, the lambic is the one in bubble wrap).
Do you good folk reckon I've anything to worry about from these pics, in terms of the pellicle on the flanders red - lambic pellicle barely visible due to the crud in the carboy. I've oak chips in muslin bags in both - the one in the lambic ended up getting mold around the outside of the carboy neck (cleaned off with vinegar), reckon I should whip them out or snip open the muslin to keep oak in there? I really want to inoculate the wood with with the bugs...
Cheers!
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Yes
EDIT: I've used clean, plain dental floss tied around the knot of the muslin bag, leaving the end of the floss outside the fermenter. You can use glass beads/marbles or stainless nuts to keep the bag fully submerged in the beer that way too.
I would be concerned about the top not being sealed. (Too much oxygen and other stuff potentially getting in there.)
I agree!
ditch the muslin bag, either free-chip or just remove it entirely. ditch that carboy cap as well, and use a solid rubber stopper if fermentation has stopped, if not a vinyl tube blow-off tube. Check out the better bottle website and look under permeability to see why this is important. Looks like you still have a (?wild?) fermentation going? While you're doing this, might be a good time to take a gravity and taste sample. That muslin bag is acting as a wick for critters to get in and out.
TD
This is what is on top of my 1 gallon berliner weisse that has been aging on raspberries for about 2.5 months. Holy cow this beer is amazing. We are bottling it today, putting 3 more gallons on raspberries, 1 gallon apricots, 1 gallon on kiwi, and 1 gallon strawberries.
I'm thinking about doing a Berliner Weisse tomorrow. What's a good yeast for the primary fermentation? I don't have any German Ale yeast, but was thinking about using US05 or Nottingham, and then adding a smack pack of Roeselare for the Lacto & Brett Lambicus, which I think are both in there (Pedio too I think). That is a strange looking pellicle you have there. What organisms did you end up using?
TD