It looks like some kind of infection to me, maybe its from the culture that made the cheese.
A friend showed me this. He said that it has been in there for 4 weeks and it will probably be 2 more weeks until he can keg. He tried it a week ago and it tasted fine, but the film has grown since then.
If you have a film them its infected. If it taste fine then drink it fast and make sure to super clean that keg. Looks like you got a brett infection
Looking at it again, I'm trying to decide if it's the fat settling at the top, like when making stock, or a pellicle? Bret maybe?
So I got what I believe to be a wild yeast or something that can live (& ruin) a 9% abv beer.
All my fermentors are plastic. Is bleach a viable option? If so how should I go about it?
If not... :\
So I got what I believe to be a wild yeast or something that can live (& ruin) a 9% abv beer.
All my fermentors are plastic. Is bleach a viable option? If so how should I go about it?
If not... :\
Any idea what the white stuff is. It still smells like beer. I'm goin to bottle anyway once I get enough bottles. It is a traditional roggenbier that was in primary for 2 weeks and in the secondary for 1 week.
That is a pellicle, and a pretty one at that. Also a sign that you have an infection, possibly Brett or Lacto.
Be careful bottling, make sure the gravity is stable, etc. If you don't want the infection to develop, you may want to drink it quickly. Or you could embrace the infection, pitch some sour bottle dregs and let it ride in secondary, if you're into that.
If i kegged and force carbed it how long will it last u think?
Looks like it could be yeast rafts.