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Just found the thread and love it. I got 25 different pics for my background. I thought I would add to it. I have 3 sours all in secondaries and all from re-pitching again and again onto the same Roeselare microbes.... I am not getting great pellicles in my secondaries, but with the winter and me losing heat I think they suffered.

My 6 month old pseudo-lambic with a variety of dregs from a sour party. The flash makes it look white, but it is more powdery and almost translucent. pH is at 3.38 but I heard it takes a dip while pedio is making the beer sick. Tastes very good, nicely sour.

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My 5 month old with dregs from sour party 2. Second generation Roeselare yeast. Not as sour as the 1st generation, but it has 1 month less after commerical dregs were added. The pH is a little higher at 3.92.

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My 4 month old with just RR Temptation dregs. Third generation Roeselare... This just left primary because I needed it for an all Brett C IPA. So I haven't had time to taste it or take a pH reading.

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Some nice brett strains built up for my wifes brew this weekend. An all Brett Black IPA using Pilsner as the base malt. Gotta love a wife that loves funky beers and brewing them :)

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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.

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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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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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Depends how old they are. And What strains are present. But sacch is usually inactive after a while
 
So if when I'm done with my ECY01 ferment, and if I want to re-pitch, I'd have to add a sacch yeast along with the washed(?) "yeast" cake? This stuff seems rather precious and difficult to obtain and would hate to rinse it down the drain. Waiting on oldsock's book to read up on this stuff


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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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I'm not entirely sure myself, to be honest. I'm fairly new to brewing with bugs. I'm definitely interested in trading some down the road, though. I'm planning on letting the gallon with the Bug County go for at least 6 months, but when I have something to send I'll let you know and we can work it out from there.
 
I got some ecy20 yeast cake. They have had a few beers on and a bunch of dregs. They sour things pretty quickly. Be happy to trade.
 
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!

ImageUploadedByHome Brew1399980741.196629.jpgImageUploadedByHome Brew1399980761.093390.jpgImageUploadedByHome Brew1399980781.524977.jpgImageUploadedByHome Brew1399980795.849228.jpg


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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!

View attachment 199167View attachment 199168View attachment 199169View attachment 199170


Sent from my iPhone using Home Brew[/QUOTE]


I would be concerned about the top not being sealed. (Too much oxygen and other stuff potentially getting in there.)
 
[ 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!

View attachment 199167View attachment 199168View attachment 199169View attachment 199170


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I would be concerned about the top not being sealed. (Too much oxygen and other stuff potentially getting in there.)[/QUOTE]



sorry for not being clearer - to clarify, they're both sealed with a red carboy cap (and either associated white hoods for both outlets, or an airlock. Do you think that having the muslin bags would still result in too much of a gap for unpleasantness to sneak in?
 
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.
 
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.


thanks.

they're both kinda floating up to the top. In the case of the flanders, it was floating on the surface, then it became submerged under the surface. However recently I noticed it had come to the surface once more. I'm wondering f it may be better to remove the oak chips submerged in these beers, removing the muslin bags to wash, sanitize, etc. anf then replace with new oak chips. What do you think - nbetter than removing from the muslin and carboy and plopping into the beer? sounds like a safer option...
 
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
 
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


eeps - sounds like i need to get me some more bungs and a wine thief. I'll try and get new chips in there as I do want to try and innoculate them for future use... Thanks for the advice!
 
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.

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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
 
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

We are using lactic starters from grain and no boil, so whatever bugs were on the grain and in the starter caused that pellicle, that is what we got on our secondary pretty consistently, hadn't seen one exactly like that before.

We didn't even use sacc in our second as the lacto from our starter was fully converting on its own. Traditional Berliner doesn't have brett or pedio.
 
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