hope you just didn't kill him to get your answer, hopefully it just numbs his tongue and he can still type.Onto more important topics, how does it taste, my good man?
For the record I'm curious too.
hope you just didn't kill him to get your answer, hopefully it just numbs his tongue and he can still type.Onto more important topics, how does it taste, my good man?
You only got 67% attenuation from your numbers above, is this an extract recipe?
Beersmith gives a slightly different number sometime and I have a wort correction number for my refractometer.
If the wort has not been sterilized, then yes it is dangerous.So is it dangerous to store unfermented wort?
Regular wort boiling at 212F at ~ 1 atmosphere will not sterilize wort and it will not stay fresh or safe for a year.Will it be sterile enough to stay fresh and safe for more than a year?
The spores could germinate, C. Botulinum could grow, and you could die from drinking it.What if the malt or the hops were contaminated with C. Botulinum?
Agreed. That's why anyone who makes wort for starters should use a pressure cooker and sterilize the wort at 250F (at 15 psi above atmospheric pressure) for at least 15 mins. Only when the wort and its container have been sterilized (not just boiled and sanitized) by pressure canning in sealed mason jars will it keep fresh for a year.Boiling alone cannot deactivate the spores, that takes 250f+
I would hope people are only using these bags for the time it take ~ 5 gal of wort to cool from 212F to room temperature and are pitching yeast immediately and not using them to store wort for weeks.yet this not an uncommon practice.
Many outbreaks of foodborne botulism in the United States result from eating improperly preserved home-canned foods. Persons doing home canning and other food preservation should
be educated about the proper time, pressure, and temperature required to destroy spores
Thanks for the information. I should change the WCF in beersmith I put that in there 3 refractometers ago when I got my first one. I normally use a spreadsheet (seanterrill) to track my SG and not beersmith. I doubled check the spread sheet it does not have a correction factor. The final numbers are usually pretty close like 1 or 2 gravity points to the hydro but I really use it more to determine activity than the actual gravity.Just a PSA here... I know some folks think of the wort correction factor (WCF) as a factor unique to their refractometer, and I've read articles written by people who should know better that implied that. But that's not the real purpose. A properly operating refractometer shouldn't need a unique one (for the particular instrument) . The real reason for the WCF is that refractometers are designed to measure sucrose concentrations, and the sugars/dextrins in wort are mostly not sucrose. And since sugar/dextrin profiles are different for each wort, ideally each wort would have its own WCF applied. In reality, most people use a single WCF for everything, maybe one that seems to give them the smallest error on average. What they are really chasing there is their own average wort.
If the wort has not been sterilized, then yes it is dangerous.
Regular wort boiling at 212F at ~ 1 atmosphere will not sterilize wort and it will not stay fresh or safe for a year.
The spores could germinate, C. Botulinum could grow, and you could die from drinking it.
Agreed. That's why anyone who makes wort for starters should use a pressure cooker and sterilize the wort at 250F (at 25 psi above atmospheric pressure) for at least 15 mins. Only when the wort and its container have been sterilized (not just boiled and sanitized) by pressure canning in sealed mason jars will it keep fresh for a year.
I would hope people are only using these bags for the time it take ~ 5 gal of wort to cool from 212F to room temperature and are pitching yeast immediately and not using them to store wort for weeks.
It's true that nothing grows in beer will kill you because of the pH and alcohol content of finished beer, but stuff that grows in unfermented wort certainly can kill you. Death from food-borne botulism is fairly rate (something like 500 cases in the last 50 years), but it can still make you sick. The CDC says:
That yeast takes days to get going from the time you pitch.
25 PSI? I've never seen, or heard, of a pressure cooker going that high. Mine goes up to 15 PSI, which is the highest I've seen....
That's why anyone who makes wort for starters should use a pressure cooker and sterilize the wort at 250F (at 25 psi above atmospheric pressure) for at least 15 mins.
25 PSI? I've never seen, or heard, of a pressure cooker going that high. Mine goes up to 15 PSI, which is the highest I've seen.
Thanks @duncan.brown. By "get going" I mean there is no visible fermentation activity. Even when pitched at proper amounts it can take days before it showing active fermentation(krausen and CO2 generated). If it grows like all other yeasts it seems like that delay might be an issue.
Remove the cloth until it started to ferment! You can also put it outside to catch whatever the wind carries.This thread has inspired me. I just brewed a new batch, with the usual sanitary protocol. But found myself with plenty of extra wort, of decent-enough gravity, so I decided to try to brew a "wild small beer": I covered that second bucket with a cheesecloth and will wait to see what happens...
We must have all kinds of yeasts and bacteria floating around in the countryside, as we often make spontaneously-fermenting kvass and other stuff. It's never failed. And we're still alive.
If it smells good, I'll drink it. I'll post an update just to reassure folks I haven't died of botulism. All for science.
It’s only one layer of very open mesh fabric - I thought it would help to keep away the flies, cat hair etc. I usually use a cheesecloth with kvass and other spontaneous fermentation. Do you think it’s important to keep it fully open?Remove the cloth until it started to ferment! You can also put it outside to catch whatever the wind carries.
Depends. Kvaas has other stuff in it that already carries yeast. Wort really needs stuff from the air so you might at least want to let it sit in the open for some hours next to some trees or flowers or whatever might contribute to stuff in the wind.It’s only one layer of very open mesh fabric - I thought it would help to keep away the flies, cat hair etc. I usually use a cheesecloth with kvass and other spontaneous fermentation. Do you think it’s important to keep it fully open?
You should be good, an open fermentation is not anaerobic, there is plenty of O2 in and around the wort.This thread has inspired me. I just brewed a new batch, with the usual sanitary protocol. But found myself with plenty of extra wort, of decent-enough gravity, so I decided to try to brew a "wild small beer": I covered that second bucket with a cheesecloth and will wait to see what happens...
We must have all kinds of yeasts and bacteria floating around in the countryside, as we often make spontaneously-fermenting kvass and other stuff. It's never failed. And we're still alive.
If it smells good, I'll drink it. I'll post an update just to reassure folks I haven't died of botulism. All for science.
I did as you suggested and - we have ignition! Less than 24h after brewing. Nice activity and buildup on top of the wort. Doesn’t smell particularly yeasty at this point.Depends. Kvaas has other stuff in it that already carries yeast. Wort really needs stuff from the air so you might at least want to let it sit in the open for some hours next to some trees or flowers or whatever might contribute to stuff in the wind.
That sounds like the perfect environment for wild fermentation! Just don't bottle this in normal manner..... This stuff will continue forever to ferment.I did as you suggested and - we have ignition! Less than 24h after brewing. Nice activity and buildup on top of the wort. Doesn’t smell particularly yeasty at this point.
I like to believe that all the relevant bugs are already floating around in the house. We’re in a log cabin with plenty of natural ventilation in a field next to a forest. And there’s lots of fermenting of assorted kinds happening during this season. Mostly the wife pickling stuff or experimenting with weird types of kvass/gira with whatever is at hand. My last beer batch has a suspicious aroma of a cross-contamination of some sort of lactobacillus…
Wow, I didn't know that wild yeast tends to fermenting longer or more attenuatively?That sounds like the perfect environment for wild fermentation! Just don't bottle this in normal manner..... This stuff will continue forever to ferment.
Bugs can and do.Wow, I didn't know that wild yeast tends to fermenting longer or more attenuatively?
I guess I do understand that it would ferment longer. I don't know why I said that. But honestly if the gravity hadn't stabilized yet I would never bottle.Bugs can and do.![]()
Let’s see what happens… I usually bottle any weird and wild stuff in PET plastic bottles, to be safe. And drink it very young. They are gushers!That sounds like the perfect environment for wild fermentation! Just don't bottle this in normal manner..... This stuff will continue forever to ferment.
That's probably the best way. Once they are carbonated, you can slow everything down by storing them in the fridge.Let’s see what happens… I usually bottle any weird and wild stuff in PET plastic bottles, to be safe. And drink it very young. They are gushers!
it's the wild yeast
Brett yeast in other words, eh? Lambic-style beers, gueuze and everything that falls under the "barnyard-like" category.
Update: (Not on the OP's wild yeast infection, but on my own very first crude and deliberate attempt at open/wild fermentation, inspired by this post - see above)This thread has inspired me. I just brewed a new batch, with the usual sanitary protocol. But found myself with plenty of extra wort, of decent-enough gravity, so I decided to try to brew a "wild small beer": I covered that second bucket with a cheesecloth and will wait to see what happens...
We must have all kinds of yeasts and bacteria floating around in the countryside, as we often make spontaneously-fermenting kvass and other stuff. It's never failed. And we're still alive.
If it smells good, I'll drink it. I'll post an update just to reassure folks I haven't died of botulism. All for science.