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Did that change and nobody told me?Life expectancy was like 30 years old and there was death in every food so you kinda were probably pretty used to being blindsided by sickness

Did that change and nobody told me?Life expectancy was like 30 years old and there was death in every food so you kinda were probably pretty used to being blindsided by sickness
YeahI’ve quit worrying about contracting botulism from homebrew. Now I worry about dying when a meteorite crashes through my roof while I’m hiding under the bed during the zombie apocalypse. I mean, the odds of that happening must be at least an order of magnitude greater than getting botulism from homebrew, amirite?![]()
What's that you say? Leaving beer at room temp for a long time? Say it ain't so!
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Yes, barrel aged is a thing, but a lot of those are higher alcohol. I'd be more worried about low alcohol (less than 6% beer), high pH sitting at room temperature in low oxygen places with seals.What's that you say? Leaving beer at room temp for a long time? Say it ain't so!
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Yeah, I haven't read much research done from hops, but I can imagine that is a big thing that prevents the growth of the bacteria (and subsequent toxins)!Tannins extracted from oak barrel staves have preservative/antiseptic properties, as do hops. They can suppress the production of toxins from botulism spores, like alcohol does, but does little to destroy the spores that actually produce those toxins. As has previously been stated, destruction of the spores requires exposure to 240F temperature for that to occur.
Kinda odd how your definition of "low alcohol beer" is "less than 6%." 4% to 6% is the most common ABV range on the planet for beers, and thus "average alcohol beer." 90%+ of the beers sold around the world are in between 4% and 6% ABV (most mainstream lagers are typically around 4.5%, 5%, or 5.5%). I don't consider something "low alcohol" unless it's under 4%. Most of the beers I make nowadays are between 3% and 5% ABV. I only consider it low alcohol if it's under 4%.Yes, barrel aged is a thing, but a lot of those are higher alcohol. I'd be more worried about low alcohol (less than 6% beer), high pH sitting at room temperature in low oxygen places with seals.
I should note, I'm getting this from scientific journals where they tested whether the toxin could form in specific environments and they observed that the toxin was present when pH was high enough and alcohol content was low enough. So this isn't just theoretical... It has happened
I am only saying 6% because that is the threshold for the bacteria growth for C. Botulinum which causes botulism.Kinda odd how your definition of "low alcohol beer" is "less than 6%." 4% to 6% is the most common ABV range on the planet for beers, and thus "average alcohol beer." 90%+ of the beers sold around the world are in between 4% and 6% ABV (most mainstream lagers are typically around 4.5%, 5%, or 5.5%). I don't consider something "low alcohol" unless it's under 4%. Most of the beers I make nowadays are between 3% and 5% ABV. I only consider it low alcohol if it's under 4%.
I'm more likely to get botulism from honey than from low-ABV, low-pH beers, but I still eat honey quite often.I am only saying 6% because that is the threshold for the bacteria growth for C. Botulinum which causes botulism.
Above 6% inhibits growth of the bacteria entirely.
So 'low' is more relative to the fact that the bacteria can grow if it is less than the 6%
I think you’re getting an awful lot of heartburn over nothing.Yeah
I'm not exactly rational. I know that. Albeit I feel a bit better about it
Honey is known to often have the spores that cause botulism. The spores themselves are practically harmless to us because our bodies can filter them out. However, infant botulism exists because infants have not developed those anti-bacterial mechanisms, so it is possible for bacteria to grow in an infants stomach thus creating the toxin.I'm more likely to get botulism from honey than from low-ABV, low-pH beers, but I still eat honey quite often.
Also, for reference:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_beer
The average pH of honey is 3.9. The range of honey. Typical range is 3.4 - 6.0, according to U.C. Cal/Davis.I'm more likely to get botulism from honey than from low-ABV, low-pH beers, but I still eat honey quite often.
Also, for reference:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_beer
Also here is a study done on the risk of pathogen in low alcohol beers. It is a real riskI'm more likely to get botulism from honey than from low-ABV, low-pH beers, but I still eat honey quite often.
Also, for reference:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_beer
So, what if I just agree with you and say forget beer, and you should just really drink hard liquor.Also here is a study done on the risk of pathogen in low alcohol beers. It is a real risk
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0362028X23068679
I'm not going to disagree with the honey part because my point was that there's virtually zero risk of me getting botulism from honey, which ACTUALLY causes botulism quite often (almost always in infants). You can come up with theoreticals for botulism from beer, but you can't actually give a single example of anyone ever having gotten botulism from beer. I'm not saying it's impossible, but it's incredibly unlikely.Also here is a study done on the risk of pathogen in low alcohol beers. It is a real risk
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0362028X23068679
Beer is generally considered safe from foodborne pathogens due to several intrinsic and extrinsic hurdles. These traditional hurdles include ethanol concentration (typically 3.5–5.0%), hops bitter acids (approx. 17–55 ppm iso-alpha acids), low pH (approx. 3.9–4.4), high amounts of dissolved carbon dioxide (2–2.5 v/v), low oxygen (<0.1 ppm), and lack of nutritive substances (Leistner, 2000, Menz et al., 2009). In addition, processing methods such as mashing, wort boiling, pasteurization, sterile filtration, and cold storage provide further protection against harmful microorganisms (Menz et al., 2011).
The production of the toxin that causes botulism from honey does not occur in the packaged honey but in the stomach of the person who consumed it. This is largely believed to be due to the immune system being unable to prevent this. It mostly happens in infants under 1 years old because their immune system hasn't developed the proper defenses yet, but it very rarely also occurs in adults (known as adult intestinal toxemia).The average pH of honey is 3.9. The range of honey. Typical range is 3.4 - 6.0, according to U.C. Cal/Davis.
I'm not going to disagree with the honey part because my point was that there's virtually zero risk of me getting botulism from honey, which ACTUALLY causes botulism quite often (almost always in infants). You can come up with theoreticals for botulism from beer, but you can't actually give a single example of anyone ever having gotten botulism from beer. I'm not saying it's impossible, but it's incredibly unlikely.
I'll also note that the definition of "low alcohol beers" in that study is actually low alcohol such as 0.5% or 1% and not "below 6%" like you theorized. And yes, if you were making 1.5% ABV beer with a high pH, using no hops, and containing little to no CO2 (carbonic acid also lowers pH), then sure, you'd be increasing the risks of it, but even that study is not saying that foodborne pathogens are likely to survive. It actually states that multiple times right from the beginning. It even gives the range of "Traditional ethanol concentration" as 3.5% to 5.0% as making it safe. The 17ppm it mentions would be around 10 IBU, which is a relatively low bittering level (hence why sour beers traditionally have IBUs below 10 IBUs because they don't want the hops to stifle bacterial growth).
I know that you realize botulism in beer is incredibly, incredibly, incredibly unlikely, but you sound like you're trying to convince yourself that it's much more likely than it actually is.
Out of the few more scientific articles I've read (one written by a microbiologist who is also a homebrewer), the explanation was that most beer is less than 4.6pH. But from my studies, that's not entirely true so I'm more so asking the question as to, if not pH (and alcohol)... then whyI'm not going to disagree with the honey part because my point was that there's virtually zero risk of me getting botulism from honey, which ACTUALLY causes botulism quite often (almost always in infants). You can come up with theoreticals for botulism from beer, but you can't actually give a single example of anyone ever having gotten botulism from beer. I'm not saying it's impossible, but it's incredibly unlikely.
I'll also note that the definition of "low alcohol beers" in that study is actually low alcohol such as 0.5% or 1% and not "below 6%" like you theorized. And yes, if you were making 1.5% ABV beer with a high pH, using no hops, and containing little to no CO2 (carbonic acid also lowers pH), then sure, you'd be increasing the risks of it, but even that study is not saying that foodborne pathogens are likely to survive. It actually states that multiple times right from the beginning. It even gives the range of "Traditional ethanol concentration" as 3.5% to 5.0% as making it safe. The 17ppm it mentions would be around 10 IBU, which is a relatively low bittering level (hence why sour beers traditionally have IBUs below 10 IBUs because they don't want the hops to stifle bacterial growth).
I know that you realize botulism in beer is incredibly, incredibly, incredibly unlikely, but you sound like you're trying to convince yourself that it's much more likely than it actually is.
Not unless you're an infant under a year old.I'm more likely to get botulism from honey
The spores are harmless to adults and children over the age of about a year if ingested. Although infants should not be fed raw honey, most infant botulism cases are thought to result from ingesting dust particles that carry spores rather than food.The spores themselves are practically harmless to us because our bodies can filter them out. However, infant botulism exists because infants have not developed those anti-bacterial mechanisms
You think I'm more likely to get botulism from beer? Because I can actually find instances of adults who got botulism from eating raw honey, but I can't find any instances of anyone who got botulism from beer.Not unless you're an infant under a year old.
I think we've already addressed that excessively in both this thread and the other one. Low pH, alcohol, hops' antibacterial properties, and so on. The examples of "higher pH beers" are typically higher hopped for one thing. It's not just pH and alcohol, though those are arguably the two biggest factors.Out of the few more scientific articles I've read (one written by a microbiologist who is also a homebrewer), the explanation was that most beer is less than 4.6pH. But from my studies, that's not entirely true so I'm more so asking the question as to, if not pH (and alcohol)... then why
I meant that you're also extremely unlikely to get it from honey. Unless you're less than one year old. So don't feed homebrew to infants either.You think I'm more likely to get botulism from beer?
Commercial beer, not homebrew. Theoretical risk only - they found the bacteria in the beer; they did not report an outbreak associated with low- or non-alcoholic beer.Also here is a study done on the risk of pathogen in low alcohol beers. It is a real risk
I think this is also with immunocompromised adults (ie the cases with adults). I'll have to look into that thoughI meant that you're also extremely unlikely to get it from honey. Unless you're less than one year old. So don't feed homebrew to infants either.
I'm not completely convinced on hops antibacterial properties as this is pretty inconclusive and understudied in the scientific sphere. But I am willing to accept that as a potential possibility but would want more research done.I think we've already addressed that excessively in both this thread and the other one. Low pH, alcohol, hops' antibacterial properties, and so on. The examples of "higher pH beers" are typically higher hopped for one thing. It's not just pH and alcohol, though those are arguably the two biggest factors.
If it's a risk in commercial beer then it would be for homebrew too..Commercial beer, not homebrew. Theoretical risk only - they found the bacteria in the beer; they did not report an outbreak associated with low- or non-alcoholic beer.