Hi guys.
I can only assume I have a house infection, but I will try to give a brief rundown of what has happened over the past few months that brings me to this conclusion. (I live in an apartment in Melbourne)
I started out just after xmas with a brewcraft starter brewery kit. I read through my entire "brewing crafts" book that came with the kit before I started.
Cleaned all of the equipment with BrewClean, and then sanitised all of the equipment with Brewshield no rinse sanitiser.
I then followed the instructions for the Cascade Pale Ale kit included. Everything went along smoothly, fermentation started within about 24hrs, and finished after a week. I have a swamp cooler system set up to keep temps around 20c
The dates on the yeast and can were well before the use by date.
When I went to bottle this beer, i had a quick sample. It was disgusting. Clearly a strong sour acidic flavour and smell, with the smell burning your nose. Didn't taste anything even close to green flat beer.
I am 100% sure my cleaning process was spot on, and the only thing I could really see that 'might' make a difference to a batch was the water. I used water straight from the tap.
I thoroughly cleaned all of the equipment before I attempted to brew a new batch.
I tried a Coopers Pale Ale kit as it was dirt cheap and I wouldn't be losing too much if it didn't work out. I also used bottled water for the entire batch. Including the water used to rinse and make up the sanitiser (i boiled the bottled water).
After following the same process as before, the beer turned out sour, acidic and undrinkable.
A friend of mine had a complete coopers home brew kit that he had never used, so he brought that around and we tried to make a coopers real ale with it.
We used all of the coopers cleaning products for this kit and equipment, and used bottled water. We even brewed this batch in the laundry, rather than the kitchen.
This batch turned out even more acidic and sour than the last 2. I also took a sample down to the local BrerwCraft shop to get their input. No doubt about it, it was infected. And they couldn't really pick out anything wrong with the process I had followed.
I have brewed beer a little bit in the past (about 4 years ago) and never had any problems like this. Basically, I was hoping some of you guys might be able to see something here I may have missed. Or is it likely I have a 'house infection'
Cheers for taking the time to read this novel
Brett.
I can only assume I have a house infection, but I will try to give a brief rundown of what has happened over the past few months that brings me to this conclusion. (I live in an apartment in Melbourne)
I started out just after xmas with a brewcraft starter brewery kit. I read through my entire "brewing crafts" book that came with the kit before I started.
Cleaned all of the equipment with BrewClean, and then sanitised all of the equipment with Brewshield no rinse sanitiser.
I then followed the instructions for the Cascade Pale Ale kit included. Everything went along smoothly, fermentation started within about 24hrs, and finished after a week. I have a swamp cooler system set up to keep temps around 20c
The dates on the yeast and can were well before the use by date.
When I went to bottle this beer, i had a quick sample. It was disgusting. Clearly a strong sour acidic flavour and smell, with the smell burning your nose. Didn't taste anything even close to green flat beer.
I am 100% sure my cleaning process was spot on, and the only thing I could really see that 'might' make a difference to a batch was the water. I used water straight from the tap.
I thoroughly cleaned all of the equipment before I attempted to brew a new batch.
I tried a Coopers Pale Ale kit as it was dirt cheap and I wouldn't be losing too much if it didn't work out. I also used bottled water for the entire batch. Including the water used to rinse and make up the sanitiser (i boiled the bottled water).
After following the same process as before, the beer turned out sour, acidic and undrinkable.
A friend of mine had a complete coopers home brew kit that he had never used, so he brought that around and we tried to make a coopers real ale with it.
We used all of the coopers cleaning products for this kit and equipment, and used bottled water. We even brewed this batch in the laundry, rather than the kitchen.
This batch turned out even more acidic and sour than the last 2. I also took a sample down to the local BrerwCraft shop to get their input. No doubt about it, it was infected. And they couldn't really pick out anything wrong with the process I had followed.
I have brewed beer a little bit in the past (about 4 years ago) and never had any problems like this. Basically, I was hoping some of you guys might be able to see something here I may have missed. Or is it likely I have a 'house infection'
Cheers for taking the time to read this novel
Brett.