Danp3d
Member
- Joined
- 27/10/15
- Messages
- 12
- Reaction score
- 4
Hi folks,
I've decided to try to brew my first sour beer - a Kriek-inspired beer, but a bit of a chimera (it's more like a cherry infused sour trippel).
Thing is, I don't have the patience to let it sit on a demijohn for a year, so I decided to just do a fast souring process (common for berliners).
What I did:
- Mashed as normal;
- Boiled for 15 minutes to sanitize and get rid of DMS;
- Cooled it to ~ 30°C and transfered to a fermenter (being careful not to splash it around to avoid oxygenation), left a very small headspace;
- Used some lactic acid to drop PH to 4.5 to prevent wild yeast infection;
- Pitched some wlp672 (Lactobacillus Brevis);
- Kept it at 30°C to ensure optimal conditions for the lacto (give it a bigger chance of fighting off any eventual yeast trying to run the show).
The idea was to let a lacto-only fermentation go until it reached a PH of ~3.5, then boil it again to kill the bugs, add some hops and pitch some WLP001 to kick off the alcohol fermentation. Drop some cherries on the secondary and be happy.
Well, I got home this evening and found a very vigorous fermentation, with a big layer of krausen on top of the beer and the airlock overflowing like crazy. Cleaned it up and placed a blowoff tube, but that's a pretty bad sign: a lacto-only fermentation shouldn't be producing all that CO2.
Question is: is anyone here familiar with WLP672? Did White Labs really just screw me over by giving me a Saccharomyces-infected Lactobacillus culture?
I'm seriously disappointed at this. Unsure if I should just dump the batch or ride it out and see what happens.
I've decided to try to brew my first sour beer - a Kriek-inspired beer, but a bit of a chimera (it's more like a cherry infused sour trippel).
Thing is, I don't have the patience to let it sit on a demijohn for a year, so I decided to just do a fast souring process (common for berliners).
What I did:
- Mashed as normal;
- Boiled for 15 minutes to sanitize and get rid of DMS;
- Cooled it to ~ 30°C and transfered to a fermenter (being careful not to splash it around to avoid oxygenation), left a very small headspace;
- Used some lactic acid to drop PH to 4.5 to prevent wild yeast infection;
- Pitched some wlp672 (Lactobacillus Brevis);
- Kept it at 30°C to ensure optimal conditions for the lacto (give it a bigger chance of fighting off any eventual yeast trying to run the show).
The idea was to let a lacto-only fermentation go until it reached a PH of ~3.5, then boil it again to kill the bugs, add some hops and pitch some WLP001 to kick off the alcohol fermentation. Drop some cherries on the secondary and be happy.
Well, I got home this evening and found a very vigorous fermentation, with a big layer of krausen on top of the beer and the airlock overflowing like crazy. Cleaned it up and placed a blowoff tube, but that's a pretty bad sign: a lacto-only fermentation shouldn't be producing all that CO2.
Question is: is anyone here familiar with WLP672? Did White Labs really just screw me over by giving me a Saccharomyces-infected Lactobacillus culture?
I'm seriously disappointed at this. Unsure if I should just dump the batch or ride it out and see what happens.