Maybe its just a perception/sensitivity thing.Colo said:To taste, it tastes fine not much of a strong beer flavour or smell at all though. After you swallow and let the remnants sit on your taste buds you do get a slight sour taste coming through...again I cant remember if this is normal or not.
- Since then the infection doesnt seem to take hold as badly, however the issue may also be with me. Since I have seen & tasted so many infected brews, I cant actually remember what a healthy brew is meant to look like and how its mean't to taste pre-carbonation?
Hey mate,Colo said:One of the basis of my suspicions was the behaviour of the yeast I use, wb-06. While I've used many Belgium whit liquid yeasts (pre infection days) ild often use wb-06 because it was cheaper and still made a nice brew. Ive used the wb-06 yeast more times than I can count. Because I live in QLD one of the tell tale signs of this yeast is your brew has a slight banana/bubblegum smell/taste. During fermentation the gas coming out of the airlock had the banana smell as it should, however by end of fermentation I would pour a glass and the smell/taste was completely gone there would be dead yeast floating in the brew and bubbles had started to form on the surface. While it didn't look as sick as the first few infected brews, it didn't seem right and didn't seem to taste right. Rinse and repeat that outcome many times with me trying different things each time and you get 9+ brews down the sink.
But now as I have stated, I can't actually remember what's right or wrong...apart from the smell/taste of the wb-06 yeast. Has anybody had experience with this yeast in warmer temperatures?
Im thinking of bottling maybe 10 bottles of the latest brew just to see how it comes out when carbonated.
"Brown bubbles and dead yeast" without seeing it this might have just been remnants of krausen and live yeast that hadn't dropped out yet.Colo said:When the infection first popped up it appeared as big brown bubbles and dead yeast on the surface of the brew with a slight "oil slick" looking film and had a sour after taste.
This...TheWiggman said:and confirm your mind isn't playing tricks on you.
Colo said:This...
I think because I had three brews in a row that were heavily infected (I was close to growing mushrooms) I think it increased my paranoia ten fold. So in my mind I was looking for signs of infection when theres a good chance the beer wasnt infected at all. So you have all convinced me that I probably did tip perfectly good brews over the garden, which I may be going to brewers hell for such a sin.
So I will fully bottle this latest back to basics brew and while it may not be as tasty as previous brews I will drink it all the same and hopefully this can signal the start of not having to buy beer again from the local.
Thank you to all for your advice and I suppose...counselling (ha ha). I will be more forgiving of my brews and stop over analysing, will let them ferment out, bottle and judge from that point.
Cheers
I agree with bconnery. I had a stage that I had a couple of infections in a row and got hyper-paranoid about everything being infected. Now I get the Wife to taste the beer from the FV if I suspect there is an infection, if she throws up then the beer is fine, If it kills her then I'll dump the beer (She is not a beer drinker, so all the more for me)bconnery said:definitely find some people to taste the finished beer you think is infected
Nothing. Considering bleach comes in HDPE containerspcmfisher said:What's wrong with bleach and HDPE?
Peroxide is AWSOME. Prob the best of the lot.Goose said:yes I remember iodophor, though tendency is to use too much and taint your beer if so, as well a stain your lovely white plastic fermenter and utensils.
Anybody tried hydrogen peroxide ? It decomposes to water and oxygen. Hardly nasty radicals....
Ah yes, explains everything. All the brews are turning out female, and are much more susceptible to yeast infections.HBHB said:Looks terribly infected with yeast.
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