TobyBenjamin
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- Jun 5, 2014
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Hey HBT! Over a few years of brewing, I've learned to contain my infection scares, but I've never seen this and I wanted a second opinion.
Some potentially relevant variables to the recipe: This beer was fermented with German Bock Lager yeast. Oak chips were boiled for 10 minutes and added to the carboy during primary. I boiled half a pound of spruce twigs and tips in 16 ounces of water, which I then filtered out and boiled down to 4 oz (so I assume it boiled long enough to sanitize), chilled, and added the syrup to secondary.
Two days ago, I moved my beer from secondary in a keg into a glass carboy for one last rest before bottling and so I could see the beer, as I couldn't visually inspect it in the keg. The glass carboy (6.5g) has a LOT of head space, but I assumed it wouldn't be a big deal for just a day or two.
I woke up to this today:
At first I thought this was some kind of mold or bacteria, but I've seen infections and this looks like something else completely. Some searching leads me to believe it's a wild yeast pellicle, which was not expected since I've never used Brett with any of my vessels or other equipment.
Any thoughts on what this could be? and just as important (if not more), is this safe to bottle and drink?
Thanks in advance!
Some potentially relevant variables to the recipe: This beer was fermented with German Bock Lager yeast. Oak chips were boiled for 10 minutes and added to the carboy during primary. I boiled half a pound of spruce twigs and tips in 16 ounces of water, which I then filtered out and boiled down to 4 oz (so I assume it boiled long enough to sanitize), chilled, and added the syrup to secondary.
Two days ago, I moved my beer from secondary in a keg into a glass carboy for one last rest before bottling and so I could see the beer, as I couldn't visually inspect it in the keg. The glass carboy (6.5g) has a LOT of head space, but I assumed it wouldn't be a big deal for just a day or two.
I woke up to this today:

At first I thought this was some kind of mold or bacteria, but I've seen infections and this looks like something else completely. Some searching leads me to believe it's a wild yeast pellicle, which was not expected since I've never used Brett with any of my vessels or other equipment.
Any thoughts on what this could be? and just as important (if not more), is this safe to bottle and drink?
Thanks in advance!