Nice KD. I bet that is GOOD STUFF but brett takes a really long time to finish, right?
I just said...a probiotic with a bunch of lacto species. Its basically the same thing as yogurt culture. I'm using it to sour it up for an oud bruin.
I split it into 2 batches. I think one I'll throw some Orval dregs in, and the other I'll just let go with the lacto and sacch. I just pitched the sacch, and I'll probably throw the brett in one of the batches next week.
Yeah one batch is going to have sacch + lacto, and the other will have sacch + lacto + brett. I may or may not use some amylase to break down some of the larger sugars that the brett would use, so that it won't have as much food and therefore won't be as powerful. However, I'm not sure what concentration I'd use. Usually you do 3 beano tablets per batch, but I've got L. casei in my wort, which produces amylase on its own.It's questionable whether or not it will sour with just sacch. and Orval (Brett Brux.)
I did and it wasn't good. I don't really know how to describe it except bitter but not hop bitter. It mellowed with age and made a decent black and tan.
Ok, here's a pedio/Brett pellicle. Soooo cooool! I just checked it out.
Beer can not be "infected." The proper term is "contaminated."
Keep me updated on how this turns out. I've heard that Pedio is supposed to kick off lots of diacetyl, but that the other organisms such as lactobacillus will clean it back up. I'm curious if the Brett does that as well. Did you just add commercial cultures?
Mine's in my avatar. Brett L. in a Dubbel. I added some more Brett L. to a Saison last Thursday. Pellicle is forming slowly, but no pics yet.
INFECT: to taint or contaminate with something that affects quality, character, or condition unfavorably
Smells and tastes a little sour. This is at 10 days and I just put it into the Keezer to crash cool. It was finished fermenting but had really small bubbles slowly trickling to the surface.
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Beer can not be "infected." The proper term is "contaminated."
"Infected" is a song written by Mr. Brett from the punk rock group Bad Religion.
Here is my Winter warmer that I aged in an oak barrel for a week. Two days after racking to secondary I had this.
I have another thread about it, but it seems to fit this thread too.
Just goes to show, not all infections (err contaminations?) are bad. I actual am excited about this one!
So in other words, once a regular brew is finished fermenting, it shouldn't have anything floating on top?
I have something growing in my carboy that looks a bit weird; this stuff looks like the foam bean inside a beanbag. little, round and white. It is an english style brown ale. after a month in the secondary this stuff started to grow. should i dump or wait it out?