My Cider Smells Like Farts...

Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum

Help Support Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Thirsty Boy

ICB - tight shorts and poor attitude. **** yeah!
Joined
21/5/06
Messages
4,544
Reaction score
106
Primary fermentation seems to be finished on my very first attempt at a cider. So a refracto and taste sample was in order - 1.03, tastes nice... smells like fart.

I have since learned that I was probably a bit short on nitrogen during the ferment and that some DAP may have avoided this.. but too late for that now.

Question is - is it like a lager?? Will that sulphury farty smell go away? Could I blow it all off by bubbling through some CO2?? Or am I stuck with and have learned a valuable lesson for next time?

TB
 
It's not too late for DAP. It should clear it up in a day or two.
 
I was wrong about the 1.03 -- I just shoved the readings into pro-mash... and its down to 1.000

Still not to late for the DAP?? Or maybe I feed it some DAP and a little fresh juice??
 
I had a similar thing TB. Cider that tasted nice, but had the aroma of farts. I did try lagering it for a few weeks, slight improvement, but as you would appreciate, once you know a smell is/was there you can't help but search for it, and i found it again!!

Spoke with John at G&G about it, a couple of things were mentioned, once was nutrients, two was the yeast i used (Red Star??? supplied/recommended by BrewCraft before i knew better)

Cheers SJ
 
what juice and or extract and yeast did you use TB?
 
Found with my first non-kit cider that cellar time has helped enormously. Mine has taken 3 months but is now a ripper. Trawling around US forums on cider making I found that most of the recipes that use juice or real apples (not cider kits) need decent time for big flavours to smooth out and for you to get that appley sweetness. Some recipes even recommend 6-8 months, but I'm too impatient for that.

Whatever you do don't tip it - cellar time will cure its ills. Has worked for me.

Hopper.

Edit - FYI - My cider finished dry like yours, darn close to and FG of 1 and used real apples.
 
Interesting, I haven't tipped mine out yet, and will be close to 6 months since i've had a sample. Might be time to whack it back on tap and see what happens.

Cheers SJ
 
I made a very simple cider using the Wyeast 4766 Cider, 8x 2.4L Berri Apple Concentrate and 0.2kg LDME and 2 heaped teaspoons of yeast nutrient. Didn't even consider using a kit. Thankfully no off smell or flavours, just can't seem to get to the end of the keg (not enough cider drinkers especially now the Mrs is on a diet).
 
I used 12ltrs of apple juice, 10ltrs of apple/pear juice, 500gms dex, red star yeast and one teaspoon of nutrient. i suspect my issues come from a combination of yeast choice and not enough nutrient.

Cheers SJ
 
Spoke with John at G&G about it, a couple of things were mentioned, once was nutrients,
Ok, so what exactly was said about nutrients ? Too much, too little, wrong type ?

I made a cider and used nutrient salts instead of dead yeast, and also ended up with the pong quite bad. It dissipated after three months cellaring at room temperature, to the point where, as discussed above, you would have to really be searching to detect it (SWMBO swore off it, because of the initial smell - ho hum that meant more for me !)
 
Ok, so what exactly was said about nutrients ? Too much, too little, wrong type ?

Too little and possibly not the right type. This was back when i thought i wqas getting good information from BrewCraft and the nutrient used was their generic one. John was also quite negative about the Red Star yeast provided (again Brewcraft recommendation).

(Not trying to bash BC here, thats been done plenty elsewhere, and i was too green to know any better at the time).

Cheers SJ
 
I used juice from the supermarket - 100% tassie fresh juice, no preservatives - but filtered rather than cloudy.

Yeast was from brewcraft - their brand of sparkling/champagne yeast. Sounds like that might be part of the problem along with no DAP - I did use some yeast nutrient (wyeast) though.

It has fermneted dry as dry could be, which is what I wanted. The object being to stabilise with sorbate/potassium met and back sweeten with juice and or other stuff at varying levels. Force carb for sparkle.

I only have 4L and just want to muck about a bit with flavours. I wont be lagering this or anything - I will screw up my nose, ignore the farts and work on flavours. Next time, different yeast, a bit of DAP and a bigger batch with storage time.

Thanks for your input guys

TB
 
Potassium metabisulphite = sulphur. The only time I've had stinky egg cider is when using sodium or potassium met. I think it should be banned. Sulphite schmulfite. I can taste it in commercial ciders too (sodium/sulphite rather than egg).

Ciders do have a tendency to give off apple farts - cellaring will allow that to dissipate.

However with a recent store juice + fresh apple (juiced) + water + lactose brew I made that didn't use anything to kill off wild yeasts, I had a drinkable cider in weeks. No sulphur. I fermented with white wine yeast using a method comparable to lager (long slow ferment, cold conditioing at 2 deg etc) Next one will be all apples plus lactose (no need for water), using a similar method

My method that I'll be exploring (follows from those so far tried)

Allow juice to clarify 48 hours in sanitised fermenter.
Rack, leaving behind crusty foam.
Add yeast @ 18 deg, allow to drop to 12 -14.
Add lactose (200g for sweetening)
Ferment 2 weeks or more.
Cold Condition 7-14 days.
Bottle and cellar three months.
 
You guys are doing well so far.

I had posted before but was not on the Macbook but on the wife's Windows notebook. It dropped connection to the DLink router as I hit post then when I told it to repair the wireless connection it locked up the entire computer and everything was lost :angry: I'm just not used to having issues like this anymore :)

I'll do a quick summarisation because Windows has taken the enthusiasm out of building a big reply.

If you have sulphur early on during fermentation that you are in better luck than if you get sulphur like smells after fermentation is complete.

My signature rotates a lot of yeast information. Before it rotated to the current list of information it covered off sulphur being expelled by the yeast cells because they have not built up the internal SO2 capability due to lack of proper nutrients.

Some yeast strains are noted for their tendencies to give off SO2 but this is not guaranteed as each wort/must is different make up so some people get it, some people don't with the same yeast.

Some but not all SO2 can be driven off through bulk aging.

If you are drinking the fermented beverage young, say in a month or so. Then SO2 can be driven off through splashing. A good whip like a lees stirrer on the end of an electric drill will do the job.

If you are a beer brewer with a kegging setup then you can bubble CO2 from your CO2 tank through the fermented beverage to drive SO2 out of solution.

Hydrogen Peroxide will also remove SO2 from solution. The stuff is just Water with an extra oxygen atom attached so its less stable and gives off the extra atom which is how it works. But that process is oxidating :)

If you are talking about a more burnt rubber-bands type smell from after fermentation, its rare but could be methanethiol. And you are not going to have much luck removing it. Bulk aging will help some but not all but thats really CH3SH and not SO2.


I have thought up, but not built. A system which is basically like the two rubbish bins attached end on end sold at Bunnings as a garden mulch system. Its on a pivot system so you can spin it around and around to help mix the mulch. Instead I envisioned a fermenter with two holes, and two one way valves. One lets you pump CO2 from the tank into the fermenter displacing the air which escapes the other valve. Then after flushing out the air you can spin the fermenter to your hearts content and bring SO2 out of solution. Then more CO2 in flushes out CO2+SO2. Rinse, repeat until no detectable sulphur.


Cheers,
Brewer Pete
 
Seems to be some confusion between different substances.

Bad egg odour is caused by Hydrogen Sulphide H2S Linky
H2S is water soluble but the levels found in yeast fermentation are miniscule.
Maybe there is also a compound in apples or fruit that easily breaks down into H2S +

Sodium metabisulphate for "sanatising" gives off Sulphur Dioxide S02 which dissolved in water produces a mixture of Sulphuric and Sulphurous acid hence the irritant if inhaled as the gas is poisonous and also produces acid in the nasal and mucous tracts.
 
You're right, got the symbols crossed.

You also have methionine and cysteine which are sulphur amino acids, which are biosynthesised by the yeast itself and the cells recycling of organic sulfur metabolites. But the short story is the breakdown in the process from lack of nutrients creates for the expulsion from the cell of the sulphur.

Any further detailed investigation leads to Cbf1p-Met4p-Met28p complex metabolism and this level even makes my eyes roll :)


Cheers,
Brewer Pete
 
too much ... too much. I am studying yeast next year. I will get all the serious chemical mumbo jumbo under control then thanks very much :D

In the meantime BP has given me the info I wanted to hear - This brew has only small traces of your typical matchstrike sulphitic stuff - it has a decent amount of H2S though. Which I was pretty sure you could (at least partially) manually drive off by shaking/beating/stirring - or as I asked earlier on... bubbling through C02.

Now that BP has confirmed this for me... its all action stations. I was planning on force carbonating and probably filtering this cider anyway .. so it gets to spend an hour or two in the keg getting CO2 bubbled through it with my airstone. What this doesn't fix .. I will put up with.

Next time i will choose my yeast more carefully and be more careful with the nitrogen content of my nutrients. So it wont be a problem in the future.

Thanks for your help guys. I 'll let you know how it turns out.

Thirsty
 
Seems to be some confusion between different substances.

Bad egg odour is caused by Hydrogen Sulphide H2S Linky
H2S is water soluble but the levels found in yeast fermentation are miniscule.
Maybe there is also a compound in apples or fruit that easily breaks down into H2S +

Sodium metabisulphate for "sanatising" gives off Sulphur Dioxide S02 which dissolved in water produces a mixture of Sulphuric and Sulphurous acid hence the irritant if inhaled as the gas is poisonous and also produces acid in the nasal and mucous tracts.

The only times my cider has produced an eggy smell was when I used sodium or potassium met (once mistakenly as a no rinse sanitiser with a kit and once as a wild yeast inhibitor with a juice/fresh apple brew). I haven't brewed masses of the stuff but skipping the campden last time resulted in clean, beautiful cider within weeks. Any improvements required
(and there are many) didn't involve sulphur or egg of any kind.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top