Yes, it seems feasible that wild microbes would live in yeast nutrient, I would just be afraid that high temperatures would cook off the nutrient, or something else rendering it ineffective. I don't know enough about it to throw it in hot water with much confidence...
I think Brett can be killed with boiling temps.I share the same concern. Do we know that the extreme heat needed to kill, say, Brett won't damage the nutrients/vitamins that you're trying to feed to the yeast?
I think it would be safer (easier?) to just get a fresh batch of nutrients/vitamins from a totally different source and try that. If your infections suddenly stop, then you've ID'd the source of the problem.
No reasonable modern brewer would suggest that.why is the advice to throw away and replace your equipment or burn down your brewery and move 50 miles away...?
The contamination (assuming you have one) obviously isn't from the must itself, but rather somewhere in your equipment or additives.I've boiled everything before and the bretts still came back in my sugar water tests. (boiling is 212F). So I'm not sure what to think on that front.
What source?The source I read said that significantly more than 150f was needed to kill bretts
No reasonable modern brewer would suggest that.
Trust info from quality scientific sources.
http://www.milkthefunk.com/wiki/Quality_Assurance
The contamination (assuming you have one) obviously isn't from the must itself, but rather somewhere in your equipment or additives.
What source?
Live microbes simply don't withstand boiling. It matters whether it's dry vs wet heat.
Habs - I really hope you get to the bottom of this. You're no stranger to sanitation protocols and what you're experiencing would be nothing less than a nightmare to me.
Good luck bro.
There are some spores that survive in boiling temperatures.
There is a high temperature tolerant strain of clostridium, which produces butyric acid. While it can survive in boiling water, it is sensitive to ph below 4. Your wine must could be lower than that, your mead must, maybe not.
Butyric flavors range from very stinky cheese to vomit.
Enjoy your breakfast.
Did you include the nutrients in your sugar water tests ?
I never use airlocks, I confess to the flagrant use of fresh towels thrown over buckets.
Exactly my experience. Except I don't yeast ranch. l cool ship my sours. I feel for the OP.Sit down before you read this. I make stuff with Brett, wild yeast, and bacteria all the time and it doesn't contaminate my clean batches. I maintain a yeast ranch of wild/Brett cultures. My long term Brett sours sit right next to where I bottle. I use the same bottling equipment for both clean and wild batches. In fact, I don't even clean my bottling bucket besides rinsing with hot tap water after use!
All this to say... I think there's hope once you determine the source; there has to be something. I don't think wild microbes in the surrounding area are a huge concern since we ALL have them.
Here's my bottling wand and rotating spigot broken down for soaking:
View attachment 618379
I wonder if this practice in combination with the long lag time for the yeast to start allows the contaminant to infiltrate? The only problem with this argument is that you covered the sugar water test with plastic wrap... Remind me where the yeast is coming from - a fresh satchet sanitized with starsan along with the scissors used to cut it open, I hope? Have you tried using goferm to decrease the lag time?
FWIW, I’ve boiled my nutrient additions in a shot glass worth of water before adding, and I’ve also just dumped them in straight. Never a problem. I’d say it’s a “safer is better than than sorry” situation even though it’s time consuming to boil and wait for the mixture to cool long enough before adding so as to not injure the fermenting yeast.
I wonder if this practice in combination with the long lag time for the yeast to start allows the contaminant to infiltrate? The only problem with this argument is that you covered the sugar water test with plastic wrap... Remind me where the yeast is coming from - a fresh satchet sanitized with starsan along with the scissors used to cut it open, I hope? Have you tried using goferm to decrease the lag time?
FWIW, I’ve boiled my nutrient additions in a shot glass worth of water before adding, and I’ve also just dumped them in straight. Never a problem. I’d say it’s a “safer is better than than sorry” situation even though it’s time consuming to boil and wait for the mixture to cool long enough before adding so as to not injure the fermenting yeast.
When I first read his post I thought maybe the Brett had infected his towels. Then air currents might possibly blow some Brett spores down from the towels into his must when he drapes the towels over his buckets.
Well, it's a thought. I don't know whether it has any merit or not.
This thread is better than a mystery novel! With all the clues now on the table, I'm aching to know what done it.
So just out of curiosity, mead isn't supposed to smell sour like bandaids?
It's sour smelling, like vomit and bandaids and horses.
So just out of curiosity, mead isn't supposed to smell sour like bandaids?
and my sugar water tests continually made more bretts.
Well heck, at this point I'll try anything to solve the riddle.
I had reservations about the towels, too. But. My house is crazy dry thanks to a wood burning stove, so even after washing, residual moisture wouldn't remain on towels for things to breed. And I bleach them, which I'm pretty sure kills just about everything. And I make plenty of wines this way, both fruit wines and kit wines, and no contamination.
So just out of curiosity, mead isn't supposed to smell sour like bandaids? I mean maybe all this time it's been fine and I just don't like the smell. Otherwise, I'm about to go introduce a gallon of infected mead to my compost pile. For my next trick: dumping honey straight into the spring water bottle and dry pitching yeast.