In another couple of days there will be more posts in this thread than cases of botulism in the US in a year.
You started this thread about homebrew specifically. You have implied more than once that you think homebrew is a greater risk than commercial beer. Stop moving the goalposts.If it's a risk in commercial beer then it would be for homebrew too
Or folks who aren't talking about it here either.Folks are spending a helluva lot of time here talking about something that's not going to happen to anyone who's talking about it here.
The point is that it shouldn't matter whether it's commercial or not. All brewing uses the same underlying processes.You started this thread about homebrew specifically. You have implied more than once that you think homebrew is a greater risk than commercial beer. Stop moving the goalposts.
This is now more of a thought experiment for myself. I don't care that it's unlikely, I just like to think about why it's unlikely given the science around this and that I'm not convinced by some of the arguments made.Folks are spending a helluva lot of time here talking about something that's not going to happen to anyone who's talking about it here.![]()
I think we should maybe give medical professionals a little bit more credit than this. There really aren't very many things that cause flaccid paralysis.It is very rare so doctors often do not know to look for it in patients exhibiting symptoms (that a million other conditions also exhibit).
You're never going to be convinced by any argument. It is not possible to disprove a hypothetical risk.I'm not convinced by some of the arguments made.
To be clear, it has been observed. In prison hooch multiple times and in experiments.You're never going to be convinced by any argument. It is not possible to disprove a hypothetical risk.
Yes I started off this post with more concern, but I'm more just curious and speculative nowYou're never going to be convinced by any argument. It is not possible to disprove a hypothetical risk.
Also as an example, before botulism was found in prison hooch, there were no reported cases of Botulism in any alcoholic beverage.You're never going to be convinced by any argument. It is not possible to disprove a hypothetical risk.
Oh, I definitely agree with you. My point mainly has to do with how he's worried about getting botulism from beer (which is insanely unlikely) but isn't worried about getting it from honey (which is also insanely unlikely, but a tiny bit more likely... meaning absurdly unlikely to happen).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.
That "prison hooch" was not beer. It was made from potatoes in incredibly unsanitary conditions using microorganisms in the air inside the prison, etc. etc. Under no definition of "beer" could you consider that beer. If you're simply trying to say that it's theoretically possible to have botulism in some kind of fermented beverage, then I don't think anyone would disagree with you on that.To be clear, it has been observed. In prison hooch multiple times and in experiments.
Oh, I definitely agree with you. My point mainly has to do with how he's worried about getting botulism from beer (which is insanely unlikely) but isn't worried about getting it from honey (which is also insanely unlikely, but a tiny bit more likely... meaning absurdly unlikely to happen).
I'm not sure why he's so fixated on botulism risk from beer but not considered about actual things that are so many magnitudes more likely to happen.
Yes these aren't normal conditions, I agree. And to your last statement, that's kind of my question. I'm just scientifically curious as to why it's the case that it hasn't happened in beer because many beer do meet the specifications for it to grow. That's my only point now, I'm just curious now why it doesn't occur more often.That "prison hooch" was not beer. It was made from potatoes in incredibly unsanitary conditions using microorganisms in the air inside the prison, etc. etc. Under no definition of "beer" could you consider that beer. If you're simply trying to say that it's theoretically possible to have botulism in some kind of fermented beverage, then I don't think anyone would disagree with you on that.
Beer is the third most drunk beverage on the planet after coffee and tea (it's the fourth most if you include water). So if it was just a numbers game, the sheer massive amount of beer consumed each year would mean you would have reports of botulism, which you do not. Beer is certainly not a hospitable environment for it. Also, most beer is both under 4.6pH and under 6% ABV (and while theoretically botulism spores can survive up to 6%, that doesn't mean a 3% or 4% ABV environment is hospitable to it). The styles of beer that are sometimes above 4.6pH all have IBUs that are considered quite antimicrobial/antibacterial. But now I'm just repeating things that I've said and that other posters have said. I mainly just want to bring attention to the statistical fact that it CAN'T be a "numbers game."So if it's hospitable and is shown in experiments to grow, then why don't we see it more often? Or it doesn't happen because it's just a numbers game and the combination of factors make it unlikely. But I'd be curious to see more studies on it.
+1To be clear, it has been observed. In prison hooch multiple times and in experiments.
But this is less about how likely it is for me, I've iterated that. This is just me being curious. I'm not trying to convince people that it's possible or that it's even risky, I'm just asking *why* it's not risky and I have not heard a good argument as to why (besides the potential antibacterial components of hops).
Sure there are factors like alcohol and pH but sometimes those aren't present so it could happen. However unlikely or hypothetical, it's still a legitimate question because in any other case, there would be more concerns. But since there have been no reported cases (besides prison hooch and experiments), it's not a problem for people
Heck, it's not even a problem for me, I'm going to drink beer and make beer. This isn't meant to be hostile or an argument, I'm just seriously curious about why given the science, there is not any cases.
Like the conditions are present in many beers so the question is why does it not happen more often? That makes me genuinely interested.
Who's to say it didn't happen more often hundreds/thousands of years ago? We didn't start recording botulism cases until recently and medical knowledge wasn't what it is today.
I guess I’ll strike that idea from my experimental series. Although, Nacho Botch-O Hazy IPA has a nice ring.it was found in nacho cheese at an gas station,
I guess I’ll strike that idea from my experimental series. Although, Nacho Botch-O Hazy IPA has a nice ring.
Almost completely irrelevant as has been pointed out.To be clear, it has been observed. In prison hooch multiple times and in experiments.
So absurdly unlikely > insanely unlikely? It's important to agree on the terminology.My point mainly has to do with how he's worried about getting botulism from beer (which is insanely unlikely) but isn't worried about getting it from honey (which is also insanely unlikely, but a tiny bit more likely... meaning absurdly unlikely to happen).
Maybe because he lives in Alaska (which perennially leads the nation in cases)?I'm not sure why he's so fixated on botulism risk
Better thought experiment - how is it that a highly pathogenic organism that is both ubiquitous in the environment and extremely difficult to destroy causes disease so rarely?This is now more of a thought experiment
So absurdly unlikely > insanely unlikely? It's important to agree on the terminology.![]()
FTWComparing health risks of prison hooch to beer is like worrying about eating broccoli because your neighbor ate rotting meat one time.
- Hop inhibition of gram positive bacteria is extremely well documented. (Ask anyone that brews sours.) Hop inhibition of C botulinum is also well documented in vitro. Hop inhibition of C botulinum in beer specifically has not been documented, likely because no one can get funding for an apparently worthless waste of time with so many confounding variables.
- Comparing health risks of prison hooch to beer is like worrying about eating broccoli because your neighbor ate rotting meat one time. Different ingredients, different process, different cultures. Basically no commonality.
It's a real stretch to claim that the processes have much at all in common. And it matters a lot, especially the boiling. Boiling means that spores have to be the source, and a healthy pitch of a known yeast means that the spores have to germinate in an environment that quickly becomes inhospitable to that process. Not boiling and relying on wild fermentation gives other organisms an opportunity to flourish and change the environment to one that might very well be considerably more favorable to germination, growth and toxin production.Both beer and prison hooch *can* follow these conditions in the same way. I get that they're 2 separate things when you look at the actual process (like you don't boil prison hooch), but it shouldn't matter if the C. Botulinum is present
Better thought experiment - how is it that a highly pathogenic organism that is both ubiquitous in the environment and extremely difficult to destroy causes disease so rarely?
Yeah, which is why some warn of no-chill wortIt's a real stretch to claim that the processes have much at all in common. And it matters a lot, especially the boiling. Boiling means that spores have to be the source, and a healthy pitch of a known yeast means that the spores have to germinate in an environment that quickly becomes inhospitable to that process. Not boiling and relying on wild fermentation gives other organisms an opportunity to flourish and change the environment to one that might very well be considerably more favorable to germination, growth and toxin production.