ShootersBrewCrew
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View attachment 229404
These little guys popped up about 10days into fermentation... We are going to bottle it and see how it goes.
i'd be pretty nervous about bottling this beer unless the gravity was really, really low (like 1.004 or less). 10 or even 20 days into fermentation doesn't let you know where those bugs will stop. you could end up with bottle bombs.
It's been in there for over a month.
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it's not about how long the pellicle has been there, but how stable the gravity is. maybe the bugs have finished their work and you're fine. however, typically they tend to work slowly and a month isn't enough. take a gravity reading now, then do so again in a month. if it hasn't changed, you're good to go.It's been in there for over a month.
That normally isnt long enough. I would suggest having at least a month with the same gravity.
Wait, I think I read your first post wrong. Did you not add brett or bugs?
Wow! That looks gnarly! Any taste/smell tests?
Has anyone seen something like this before? I think it's a combo of trub/yeast, but the slimy cottage cheese like texture makes me think it could be something worse.
Looks like regular krausen for brett or mixed fermentation to me.
your bottles gushed because there were still sugars in there that the bugs - whatever was creating that "white skin", or pellicle - could still ferment. your brewers yeast, saccharomyces, couldn't digest them but other microbes like brettanomyces, lactobacilus and pediococcus can. they continued to ferment in the bottle and build up pressure. good thing you opened them when you did. had you waited longer, they might have exploded as pressure continued to build.WOW! just found this thread. I got that white skin on top on a brew, i tried to bottle it and the same white"web" started growing in the bottles aswell after just a few days, that freaked me out so i tried to open one and it gushed evereywhere so i had to pour em all out. Doens this happen to you?
They came all on their own.
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your bottles gushed because there were still sugars in there that the bugs - whatever was creating that "white skin", or pellicle - could still ferment. your brewers yeast, saccharomyces, couldn't digest them but other microbes like brettanomyces, lactobacilus and pediococcus can. they continued to ferment in the bottle and build up pressure. good thing you opened them when you did. had you waited longer, they might have exploded as pressure continued to build.
how to avoid this? make sure that those residual sugars are completely fermented before bottling. this is one of the reasons why sour beers can take months to make.
Has anyone seen something like this before? I think it's a combo of trub/yeast, but the slimy cottage cheese like texture makes me think it could be something worse.