surfbrewer
Well-Known Member
I agree. Depending on the strain of yeast, that 73 degrees is probably one of your biggest problems and may be a relatively easy fix. Good luck.
Cheers
Cheers
BierMuncher said:... In this case, I'd recommend getting to the simplest of scenarios. Use some hot mild bleach solution to clean everything (I use bleach)...put together a simple recipe...do a full boil...chill your wort as quickly as you can..and pitch a dry ( nottingham) yeast.
Get back to basics.
rohanski said:OK guys I ran another batch yesterday. I used bottled water, boiled it inside and took it directly outside to cool with an EC, aeriated and & pitched the yeast all outside. The starter tasted good. Now I'm a little scared. It cranked up within 10 hours but I'm getting that grassy smell again. I never noticed this in the past when I was getting good batches. One other thing I noticed is that the only two batches that were good were a lighter beer with only 1 oz. of hops. Any thoughts?
No, I pour it in the toilet or down the sink drain. I am in San Antonio.rohanski said:Do you dump the bad beer outside? If so is it on the South side of your house?
I do this and I'm starting to wonder if that might be keeping it going.
Where is Topperwein?
No, all my ingredients have come from either Austin Homebrewing Supply or More Beer.rohanski said:Do you buy from San Antonio Homebrew Supply?
Opps, fixed that.rohanski said:I hate beer too when they run into my truck.
Maybee this cold front blowing through will clear the air.
Has anyone in San Antonio had unusal infection problems. Maybee this should be another thread. I'll start it.
kvh said:Someone a while back finally beat a long string of infections by soaking his fermenter in a bleach solution for a few days, then rinsing with water, then star san. His theory, which was apparently proved correct, was that the scratches in the buckets were harboring the bacteria - the bleach killed that, and then the water star san eventually got rid of the rid of the bleach. At this point, new fermenters are probably in order anyway.
kvh
Don't put anything smaller than my elbow in them?Cheesefood said:The easy way to fix that is to only use your buckets for beer and never put anything abrasive in them. You don't need to scrub them, just a little oxyclean and a soft sponge prior to sanitizing.
Treat your bucket like your ears.
pldoolittle said:This is going to sound really demeaning, but please understand that I am not trying to talk down to anyone. I'm only trying to observe and offer feedback/help. That said;
I don't doubt you've are having some issued, but are you sure they are all actually infected? Is it possible that a few bad batches and a lot of frustration is just messing with your head? I say that because the symptoms you are reporting are all over the board (see below). Bandaid, grass, sour, sweet, aceto. That describes a number of different things, some of which are microbic, some procedural, and some just weird fermentation smells.
At this point, I think you need another set of senses to help you unravel this. I'd recommend finding someone close and make arrangements to work together. If that's impossible, I'd start bottling the mistakes and sending them to HBT members for opinions. I'm no expert, but I'd be happy to look at anything you want to send.
> I am 95% sure is bad. It smells like the last really bad one
> Smells like bandaids
> My wife (hates beer) smelled my batch yesterday and said it smell like apple
> cider. I think my problem might be aceto bacteria.
> It appears to be brett and pedio
> I'm getting that grassy smell again.
> Pumpkin orange, extreemely sweet
> pumpkin orange, tastes sour and had the bandaid flavor
JnJ said:Remember, you grouped together what 2 different people are finding, no one claimed all that...........