I've been doing a double batch of berliner weisse over the past few days, and decided to take a few pictures along the way.
The malt bill is 50/50 Weyermann Pils and Wheat malts, 3.5kg of each for a 46L batch.
Here's what I was working with; my trusty Techni-ice mash tun!
with trusty BeerBelly False Bottom
Mashed in very thin this time to see if there was a difference. This was about 40L, with grain added and stirred, leaving 10L for a batch sparge at the very end.
At this time, I mashed for 60 minutes, opened the lid of the fermenter and walked away for a few hours.
Once the mash hit 45ish degrees (I think it was 47), I poured in a vial of Lactobacillus Delbrueckii, gave it a quick stir, closed the lid and waited for some magic to happen.
24 hours later, it smelled like a bucket of sick on a hot day, and looked like this:
Note on the top-right there's some growth going on. Mmmm. At this stage it smells so bad, you would be mad wanting to drink it. Tastes ok though, just like sweet wort.
48 hours later (72 hours in the mash tun), I'm ready to boil. It now smells very very sweet, no sign of the vom smell, sourish and vaguely tropical. Reminds me of the smell of a mango weiss bar. (how fitting!)
The biggest difference is the appearance. Look at that lacto growth.
A bit more of a close up
I then drained the mash tun to a bucket and transferred to the urn for a boil. It left nice ropey strands of lacto and whatever else was growing in there around the edges of the fermenter. Wort is beige coloured.
I sparged with 10L of water to get the last of the goods out and boiled for 15 minutes with a handful of old Spalt I had lying around - probably 10g.
Into the fermenter for a slow chill and tomorrow I'll pitch some BRY-97. The wort tastes sour, wheaty and sweet, quite complex!
Here's the drained mash tun
It gets rinsed out, then blasted with a strong hot water sodium percarbonate soak for 24 hours filled to the brim, followed by a starsan spray before going back in to storage.
Here's the wort draining to the fermenter - yes it's cloudy, but I find it clears well once fermented.
I hope this helps anyone who wants to try this method. It is quite simple, it just involves time up front, rather than waiting months for it to sour in the fermenter, and somewhere out of the way you can ride out the vom smell for the first 24-48 hours.
Happy brewing!