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Wild yeast culture on fruit skin?

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foragedbrews

Active Member
Joined
Aug 5, 2023
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Location
Bristol, UK
How might I identify that something growing on a wild fruit skin is yeast or something else? Am I right in understanding matte (not fluffy) brown blobs are yeast colonies? Thanks. I've tried googling and got nothing on how to determine this.
 
I am no expert, but if it has white on it I assume it is yeast. Like the dull whiteness you see on almost every fruit before you wash it (not store fruits). I do not think brown is yeast, though I could be wrong. Creamy white is often used as a descriptor. Not blobby brown. Oooh, a new beer name. Dibs!

Without scoping it though, you are taking a gamble no matter how you decide to use it. I usually ferment it out and see if there is anything along the way that produces something good. If I let it go a couple weeks and the first week is good, but the second week starts producing some off flavors, I go back and start isolating early with the next batch. By batch I mean starter. I don't make more than a 1L starter for building these up, and usually 250 is the biggest flask I'll break out in the beginning. I do have a scope, but I haven't gotten to use it much.

I am by no means a professional, so take what I say with a grain of salt.

I'd like to say you are making a mountain out of a mole hill, but you are asking the right things. It is just that this isn't a science most people are diving into, on our scale. There are tons of little guys like us out there doing it though; Sui Generis' 50 Meter Beer Project is good for info, the old dissertation by him was excellent yeast information. I think I saw you mention him as a source of idea, his older stuff was great: Yeast Wrangling

Bootleg, Bison (Tame the Yeast: How to Capture Wild Yeast for Homebrewing), to name but a few others.

On deck is my nut brown ale: Blobby Brown
 
Yeast is on every fruit.

That's all you need to know.

No way to tell what is what by colour because it's always a mix of huge amounts of microorganisms. Just don't use anything that smells bad or is visibly moldy or rotten in any way.
 
Even irradiated fruit?
Obviously not. Also chemically treated fruits can be quite dead on the surface. I'm talking about fruits from the garden or organic fruits from the store. Most of the non organic ones also work.
 
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