aaah that's what i been wondering. i'm guessing then its the belgian style i'm hankering for.
well, i can but try. i'll hope to get the brew down after NYE.
chris.
Before you risk a big batch, try it in a larger starter.. if no good turf it.
What exactly do you mean by larger starter? The whole culture is already in an almost full 2l bottle (I think I may have overdone the water and made it a bit watery ><). Should I maybe re-pitch it into a new starter and culture again? It's not really a bad flavour, it's just aromatic and a bit odd. Not what I expected with the yeast of a wheat beer. Maybe it's that I have a lager yeast bottling strain and there are odd aromas coming through because of the temperature over here? (It's pretty warm in melb at the moment, owing to it being summer)
Lager yeast bottling strain? We are talking a Hoegaarden re-culture here right?
What was your process?
The generally accepted ratio of DME : Water is 100g : 1,000ml
You want to be ultra sanitary because you are dealing with a tiny amount of yeast, so the ratio of yeast to anything else is much worse than an infection when using bought yeast.
Boil any DME additions for 15 mins.
Sanitise any vessels with a no-rinse for ages.
Try to eliminate breezes, draughts, and airbourne bacterial sources.
Flame the mouth of your commercial bottle, and do not touch it.
Start tiny and build up - maybe 100ml - 200ml - 400ml
A successful yeast farmer may be more useful here.
If it were me, I'd scrap this starter and call it an excuse to buy more Hoegaarden.
I know there's yeast in there which are working but I'm fairly sure now that it's either a weird yeast, or the whole thing is infected, and I'm getting this weird smell and tang which is quite funky and strange.
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