jedi_2000_14
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Sorry my first bock I've done plenty others just never used chocolate anyway lol thanks appreciate I'll keep u guys posted Thanks so much
Bazin said:Ok, so after a good looking primary, I racked to a carboy. After a few weeks, I noticed a white film on the top of the beer, but it was very localized and small. I racked to a new carboy and it tasted fine.
Now, after about 4 days, this is what it looks like.
Thoughts?
I read this thread last Thursday and Friday and started thinking about my Belgian Dubbel that has been in secondary for about a month, following about 4 weeks in primary.
It looked good coming out of primary and was actually supposed to go into a 55 gal barrel with some other people's recipes to age for a few months before we split it back up. I popped it open this weekend and saw this:
![]()
Consensus is that it is a Lacto infection. I haven't tasted it yet, but plan to soon.
Some advice I got: Add some bret and see what happens in a few months. I don't know that I want to try to go this route.
From reading on here and other places I'm more inclined to bottle it (if it tastes ok) and see how much I can drink/share before it gets too sour.
I used WLP510 if it matters. It was part of a cake from someone else, but his beer is fine (and my primary didn't seem to have any problems)
Thoughts/opinions? Thanks.
No such thing as too sour![]()
Million dollar question: wild yeast infection or an expected effect of the WL380 yeast? If the former, is it safe to use the equipment again, or will those yeasties (or bacteria) get into anything else that touches it?
I think you will be okay. Looks like the yeast is just settling out. You can use the same equipment just make sure to sanitize as always.
FTFY. Unless you're autoclaving with steam, you're sanitizing.
That looks normal to me, unless it's into your 2nd week of fermenation or your secondary. Next time use a blowoff tube. If it overflowed on you, chances are the natural fermenation and CO2 would push out any bacteria anyway. I've had the top blow off and hit the ceiling it still turned out fine.
Chive on, NervousDad
P.S. How do you REUSE starsan? Did I miss something?
This batch was supposed to be a hefeweizen (WL 380), which fermented very very happily for the first few days:
[CLIP]Today I noticed there's a new foam on top of the fermenter (very difficult to see due to the dried foam):
View attachment 48382
Which is pale white and has much larger bubbles than any krausen I've seen... Plus, globs of white goo shake free and fall if you move the fermenter (as seen in the pic). So now I'm thinking infection.
For the benefit of any intrepid homebrewers down the line: I cold crashed this brew for a little over a week, racked to a keg, and carbed at 28psi@40... and it's delicious. If the globs were in fact an infection (I suspect they were not), they added no off flavors. I think it's more likely that the globs were hot break proteins that got racked to the fermenter and were stirred up and locked into the krausen by WL380's spirited fermentation (though I'm happy to be corrected on this point).
Take home point: despite a worrisome appearance, (does) not (appear to be) an infection!
Hey guys, I just dry hopped with pellets for the first time, opened up the fermentor and found this pulp-looking stuff. I was wondering if anyone's seen this before / knows what it is. It definitely has an off odor, so I'm guessing its something funky growing in there
![]()
Good or bad idea to bottle and drink?
I read this thread last Thursday and Friday and started thinking about my Belgian Dubbel that has been in secondary for about a month, following about 4 weeks in primary.
It looked good coming out of primary and was actually supposed to go into a 55 gal barrel with some other people's recipes to age for a few months before we split it back up. I popped it open this weekend and saw this:
![]()
Consensus is that it is a Lacto infection. I haven't tasted it yet, but plan to soon.
Some advice I got: Add some bret and see what happens in a few months. I don't know that I want to try to go this route.
From reading on here and other places I'm more inclined to bottle it (if it tastes ok) and see how much I can drink/share before it gets too sour.
I used WLP510 if it matters. It was part of a cake from someone else, but his beer is fine (and my primary didn't seem to have any problems)
Thoughts/opinions? Thanks.