• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Starter Looks Weird

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

IgorRVA

Member
Joined
May 16, 2014
Messages
9
Reaction score
0
I was just making my starter for brew day and while I was pouring my wort into the flask at the last second there was some dark sediment almost black that came in and my wort is a little gray looking. Anyone seen anything like this? Any advice/wisdom is appreciated. Thanks


Sent from my iPad using Home Brew
 
Wyeast pack? I've had some of that black stuff too, seems like its some plastic from the pack. Don't worry about the color, I bet it will look normal after a day or two when the yeast grows.
 
It was originally a wyeast 1056, this was when I was building it up after I decanted the first. Black sediment came from my dme wort.


Sent from my iPad using Home Brew
 
I make my starters with DME and step them up with un-fermented wort I make in a 3 gallon batch. I'll save most of the wort wort in sterile mason jars. I sterilize them in the oven at a slow ramp to 200 degrees then pour in the boiling wort and cap them. After letting the wort settle I always get black/gray sediment in the un-fermented wort. Once it goes in the starter though, I get nice white yeast cakes when I turn of the stir plate and let the yeast settle. Every now and then I get a jar that starts fermenting on its own and causes pressure build up in the mason jar. I don't use those, even though they smell fine. They will have a yeast cake settled on the bottom of them. I bet it is from previous beers I have made. I tend to purposefully let my beer yeast "contaminate" my garage to keep out the bugs. All my beers are so far so good. My house ale stain was cultured from a sierra Nevada bottle. My house lager strain was cultured from a $1 expired american lager strain.

In short, don't worry about it unless it smells bad, and by all means, use temperature control during fermentation to boost the bug you want.
 
Back
Top