WeatherWithYou
Member
Hi all,
I just bottled my first brew (at least since one I did for Uni back in 2011), and less than 24 hours later I've got a bunch of gunk at the top of each bottle. Not ideal, but I can't tell if this is more likely to be yeast rafts or infection.
This is the relevant brewing info:
It's a kit brew using pre-hopped wort, only thing I added was boiling water, tap water, and some steeped finishing hops. Fermentation went OK, gravity levelled out at 1.010, which is a bit high but I don't think I was using the healthiest yeast so attenuation probably wasn't fantastic. Fermentation temp was typically around 24C, but may have gone up as high as 26C at times, as I don't really have temperature control options (I'm in an apartment with very little space). I neglected to take an OG reading. Fearing a stuck fermentation, I gave the fermenter a couple of swirls 24 hours apart, but nothing changed gravity-wise. The yeast, however, completely refused to settle, terrible flocculation and an extremely hazy beer.
I decided to do a single bottle to check if this was going to end up being bottle bombs, and within about 5 days it was done, which probably isn't surprising given how much yeast was floating in the beer, but it seemed to level out and not explode. It did warp the bottom of the PET bottle a bit, but I left it for a couple of days and it got no worse, the bottle still had a little bit of give, so it wasn't bursting at the seems. I chilled it and took it to a party and it was perfectly carbonated, but very, very green flavour-wise.
I decided to dry hop with about 25g Cascade hops - pellets straight into the fermenter. This did not improve the haze/murkiness situation, I should have used a sock, but I could not be bothered doing up sanitiser for a single hop sock. Lesson learned I guess.
Anyway, left it to dry hop for a few days, the flavour and aroma greatly improved over this time. Two nights ago, I grabbed some finings in an attempt to clear up the beer. When dissolving I thought I set the kettle to 80 degrees but may have forgotten to, so I'm not sure if I used very hot or boiling water, in case that's relevant.
Then last night, I bottled the rest of the beer because I had some time and was, frankly, impatient. The finings didn't do much, the first 5 bottles or so I put a hop sock over the bottling wand to filter out the bigger particles, after which point it cleared a bit but was still full of yeast in suspension. There was no hint of infection in the beer - in fact it was tasting way better than I had dared to hope after earlier taste tests.
This morning, there were patches of gunk already formed, and they've gotten a bit larger over the course or the day. It's about 28C indoors today, but the bottles are sitting on a cooler tile floor which I am hoping is keeping them down to around 25-26C. I have attached a photo.
So, given the above information, have I managed to accidentally infect every bottle, or is this more likely down to a very low-flocculation yeast creating yeast rafts? I will do my own taste test of one bottle in a few days, but any insight in the meantime would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks in advance
I just bottled my first brew (at least since one I did for Uni back in 2011), and less than 24 hours later I've got a bunch of gunk at the top of each bottle. Not ideal, but I can't tell if this is more likely to be yeast rafts or infection.
This is the relevant brewing info:
It's a kit brew using pre-hopped wort, only thing I added was boiling water, tap water, and some steeped finishing hops. Fermentation went OK, gravity levelled out at 1.010, which is a bit high but I don't think I was using the healthiest yeast so attenuation probably wasn't fantastic. Fermentation temp was typically around 24C, but may have gone up as high as 26C at times, as I don't really have temperature control options (I'm in an apartment with very little space). I neglected to take an OG reading. Fearing a stuck fermentation, I gave the fermenter a couple of swirls 24 hours apart, but nothing changed gravity-wise. The yeast, however, completely refused to settle, terrible flocculation and an extremely hazy beer.
I decided to do a single bottle to check if this was going to end up being bottle bombs, and within about 5 days it was done, which probably isn't surprising given how much yeast was floating in the beer, but it seemed to level out and not explode. It did warp the bottom of the PET bottle a bit, but I left it for a couple of days and it got no worse, the bottle still had a little bit of give, so it wasn't bursting at the seems. I chilled it and took it to a party and it was perfectly carbonated, but very, very green flavour-wise.
I decided to dry hop with about 25g Cascade hops - pellets straight into the fermenter. This did not improve the haze/murkiness situation, I should have used a sock, but I could not be bothered doing up sanitiser for a single hop sock. Lesson learned I guess.
Anyway, left it to dry hop for a few days, the flavour and aroma greatly improved over this time. Two nights ago, I grabbed some finings in an attempt to clear up the beer. When dissolving I thought I set the kettle to 80 degrees but may have forgotten to, so I'm not sure if I used very hot or boiling water, in case that's relevant.
Then last night, I bottled the rest of the beer because I had some time and was, frankly, impatient. The finings didn't do much, the first 5 bottles or so I put a hop sock over the bottling wand to filter out the bigger particles, after which point it cleared a bit but was still full of yeast in suspension. There was no hint of infection in the beer - in fact it was tasting way better than I had dared to hope after earlier taste tests.
This morning, there were patches of gunk already formed, and they've gotten a bit larger over the course or the day. It's about 28C indoors today, but the bottles are sitting on a cooler tile floor which I am hoping is keeping them down to around 25-26C. I have attached a photo.
So, given the above information, have I managed to accidentally infect every bottle, or is this more likely down to a very low-flocculation yeast creating yeast rafts? I will do my own taste test of one bottle in a few days, but any insight in the meantime would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks in advance