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Bowfisher

Active Member
Joined
Aug 10, 2014
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Location
Lebanon
Northern Brewer's Chocolate Milk Stout, was 2 weeks in primary and 4 weeks secondary. Bottling today and saw this when I opened the lid.

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It tastes amazing! I was hoping it was OK, I'm really new at this and hadn't seen that before.
 
I know for a fact that several other forum members will ID that as an infection starting. Personally I can't say. If it tastes okay then just wait it out and make sure it's still okay in a couple weeks.
 
Rack from underneath and bottle it. Try a bottle every few weeks and make sure it isn't turning into gushers. It will probably be fine.
 
I know for a fact that several other forum members will ID that as an infection starting. Personally I can't say. If it tastes okay then just wait it out and make sure it's still okay in a couple weeks.

Looks ok to me. I have seen similar on a chocolate milk stout.
 
That sort of shiny stuff that has edges that break is the beginning of a pellicle. It's infected for sure.

Bottle it up, and drink it before it turns sour.

It looks like secondary was in a bucket. If you're going to do a secondary, make sure to do it in a carboy with reduced headspace and air exchange. Once fermentation stops, a wide headspace with oxygen in it allows things like lactobacillus or acetobacter to take hold.
 
Looks infected.

Def does not look like yeast rafts. at least none that ive ever seen with any of my batches or online.
 
If it turns sour I would say your lucky. The couple of infections i've had the (dis)pleasure of tasting, one my own and one commercial, was more like bottled fountains of puke with a heavy mixture of black pepper and clove.
 
Once it's properly carbonated, keeping the bottles in the fridge will slow the lactobacillus down quite a bit and give you a longer window to consume the beer.
 
Tried a bottle this morning, it's carbonated pretty well and tastes good! It's still a little green so I'm gonna put it all in the fridge and give it a couple more weeks. Thanks everyone for your feedback.
 
Given the style of the beer, I'd say there is a fair chance the stuff at the top there were oils from cocoa nibs. Did your kit have those? I think we've had the same sort of scare here in the past with nibs.

I will agree it's pretty similar to the waxy surface you see in the begging of a lacto bacterial infection. Even a few waxy bubbles!

[edit] well, then there's this: brewing with cacao nibs...infected?
 

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