Renegade
Awaiting Exile
- Joined
- 3/5/09
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Moving this query from the Gelatine Thread because it's probably not worth getting OT over there.
After about two weeks in primary, and about a week in secondary, some interesting patterns are appearing on the surface of my brew. I have added gelatine about four days ago, a teaspoon into about 100-150ml of 80 degree water. I havent been watching it closely, but noticed this before I went to work today when I popped the lid:
View attachment 27964
Photo is taken with flash on, so its over-exagerated, but to the human eye, the threads on the surface drop into the water up to 2mm in places, and the whole surface is kind of oily (?) looking. It doesnt smell or taste off, but it's not looking too great.
Have just moved a second fermenter full of wort thats been fermenting for three days to avoid cross-infection, hope it's not too late.
Any ideas if this is an infection ? This will be my first WTF after many a succesful brew previously, so I wouldnt minid knowing the potential causes. "Best Practice" methods havent changed at all, so I'm stumped.
So glad I didnt bottle this last night as I was intending to do.
After about two weeks in primary, and about a week in secondary, some interesting patterns are appearing on the surface of my brew. I have added gelatine about four days ago, a teaspoon into about 100-150ml of 80 degree water. I havent been watching it closely, but noticed this before I went to work today when I popped the lid:
View attachment 27964
Photo is taken with flash on, so its over-exagerated, but to the human eye, the threads on the surface drop into the water up to 2mm in places, and the whole surface is kind of oily (?) looking. It doesnt smell or taste off, but it's not looking too great.
Have just moved a second fermenter full of wort thats been fermenting for three days to avoid cross-infection, hope it's not too late.
Any ideas if this is an infection ? This will be my first WTF after many a succesful brew previously, so I wouldnt minid knowing the potential causes. "Best Practice" methods havent changed at all, so I'm stumped.
So glad I didnt bottle this last night as I was intending to do.