On February 13 I brewed a Pliny clone. Being by far the hoppiest beer I've ever done, I didn't realize how stupid it was of me to use leaf hops, and I ended up being unable to siphon anything out of the kettle (thankfully, my next batch will be with a shiny new Blitchmann). Then I remembered I had bought a whole-pail nylon mesh bag, and figured I'd put it in the bucket and pour the wort through it. Rinsed the bag first, but didn't bother sanitizing it. The bag momentarily slipped since I didn't secure it well enough, allowing about a dozen individual hop cones into the bucket, but I quickly fixed it.
After I was done pouring, I realized that the only thing more stupid than doing a Pliny clone with leaf hops, was doing a PARTIAL BOIL Pliny clone with leaf hops. I think I had about 2 inches of wort in my ale pail; the leaf hops had soaked up pretty much the entire kettle.
Frustrated as hell at this point, the kitchen a mess, and me personally exhausted, I said screw it, picked up the bag with hands that hadn't been wash since I had started, and squeezed every last drop of wort that I could out of it. Like squeezing a sponge, the wort flowed all over my less-than-immaculate hands, and because the hops ended up retaining almost nothing, I actually overshot my target OG by quite a bit for the first time ever (I'm pretty much always within 2 points) at 1.092.
Today, about 2.5 weeks later, I opened the bucket to rack it to secondary on top of a huge dry hop charge. Normally I wouldn't secondary but I wanted to get it off the hops that had fallen in when the mesh bag slipped - I thought it had been a LOT more than I later found out there was. I was resigned to the fact that the beer would be disgustingly infected, sour, etc, but I was going to finish it out anyways.
And my god, the smell was absolutely heavenly, easily the best smelling beer (at this stage) I've made to date. Which is funny because exactly a week earlier, and also fermenting right now, is the worst smelling beer I've ever made, a Berliner Weisse.
And the appearance was absolutely pristine, quite clear for a beer at this stage, with a beautiful color. I'm already excited to drink this beer!
So I'm wondering why the beer seems to have survived what I thought would be an inevitable infection. Does the ridiculous amount of hops in this beer make it immune or something? Would the very high ABV kill any bacteria that may have taken a slight hold? Is it that the 3L WLP001 starter that started VERY quickly didn't even let one take hold at all? Or are the chances of infection not even that high to begin with? Or MAYBE (I hope not, and I doubt it) the infection just isn't showing signs after only 17 days?
I know it's impossible to have the right answer for this particular instance, but I'm wondering if infections are really as easy to get as some people suggest. The only infections my beers have ever had are ones I deliberately inoculated them with, and after this it seems that short of throwing in a large bacterial culture, even the most unsanitary practices haven't seemed to nail me yet, although I realize this beer, for the reasons mentioned above, should be less susceptible to infection than probably over 99.9%+ of the beers ever made.
After I was done pouring, I realized that the only thing more stupid than doing a Pliny clone with leaf hops, was doing a PARTIAL BOIL Pliny clone with leaf hops. I think I had about 2 inches of wort in my ale pail; the leaf hops had soaked up pretty much the entire kettle.
Frustrated as hell at this point, the kitchen a mess, and me personally exhausted, I said screw it, picked up the bag with hands that hadn't been wash since I had started, and squeezed every last drop of wort that I could out of it. Like squeezing a sponge, the wort flowed all over my less-than-immaculate hands, and because the hops ended up retaining almost nothing, I actually overshot my target OG by quite a bit for the first time ever (I'm pretty much always within 2 points) at 1.092.
Today, about 2.5 weeks later, I opened the bucket to rack it to secondary on top of a huge dry hop charge. Normally I wouldn't secondary but I wanted to get it off the hops that had fallen in when the mesh bag slipped - I thought it had been a LOT more than I later found out there was. I was resigned to the fact that the beer would be disgustingly infected, sour, etc, but I was going to finish it out anyways.
And my god, the smell was absolutely heavenly, easily the best smelling beer (at this stage) I've made to date. Which is funny because exactly a week earlier, and also fermenting right now, is the worst smelling beer I've ever made, a Berliner Weisse.
And the appearance was absolutely pristine, quite clear for a beer at this stage, with a beautiful color. I'm already excited to drink this beer!
So I'm wondering why the beer seems to have survived what I thought would be an inevitable infection. Does the ridiculous amount of hops in this beer make it immune or something? Would the very high ABV kill any bacteria that may have taken a slight hold? Is it that the 3L WLP001 starter that started VERY quickly didn't even let one take hold at all? Or are the chances of infection not even that high to begin with? Or MAYBE (I hope not, and I doubt it) the infection just isn't showing signs after only 17 days?
I know it's impossible to have the right answer for this particular instance, but I'm wondering if infections are really as easy to get as some people suggest. The only infections my beers have ever had are ones I deliberately inoculated them with, and after this it seems that short of throwing in a large bacterial culture, even the most unsanitary practices haven't seemed to nail me yet, although I realize this beer, for the reasons mentioned above, should be less susceptible to infection than probably over 99.9%+ of the beers ever made.