ssashton
Regular.
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2019
- Messages
- 226
- Reaction score
- 71
Hi,
I've done a number of brews with no problem, usually I think I'm pretty good at being clean. My last two have been infected though :'(
I think the first one became infected when it over-flowed the fermenter. After that happened I put a couple of tubes through the lid so it would over-flow down the tubes if it happened again. I can only guess the tubes were not completely sterile. The fermentation stopped short and I had noticed an increasingly cider-like smell.
This time I made extra effort to clean and steriliser the fermenter bucket but I'm getting the same cider smell and horrible bitter taste!
I cleaned the fermenter bucket with normal washing liquid, rinsed, then soaked it in Sodium Percarbonate (Wilko brewing steriliser) for nearly 1 hour and washed it all around as much as possible. I also soaked the siphon in the same solution and made very sure it got all down inside the tube. I also soaked the chiller coil (copper pipe coil) in the solution, but anyway that will soon be dunked in 100C wort which one would hope will kill anything that might be there.
I cleaned the kettle and also rinsed it with sodium percarbonate, although not so fully as the fermenter. I do not really expect the infection comes from the kettle that spends an hour at 100C.
So.. I'm not really sure what to do from here. Is sodium percarbonate just not such a great steriliser? Do I need to use something else? Or are micro scratches in the plastic fermenter surface harbouring bacteria?
Any guesses about what the infection is, with a cider-like smell and very bitter, kind of plastic after taste?
I suppose I'll buy a new fermenter bucket, plastic spoon and siphon. My first brew sat in the keg too, so I guess that'll need to go!
I've done a number of brews with no problem, usually I think I'm pretty good at being clean. My last two have been infected though :'(
I think the first one became infected when it over-flowed the fermenter. After that happened I put a couple of tubes through the lid so it would over-flow down the tubes if it happened again. I can only guess the tubes were not completely sterile. The fermentation stopped short and I had noticed an increasingly cider-like smell.
This time I made extra effort to clean and steriliser the fermenter bucket but I'm getting the same cider smell and horrible bitter taste!
I cleaned the fermenter bucket with normal washing liquid, rinsed, then soaked it in Sodium Percarbonate (Wilko brewing steriliser) for nearly 1 hour and washed it all around as much as possible. I also soaked the siphon in the same solution and made very sure it got all down inside the tube. I also soaked the chiller coil (copper pipe coil) in the solution, but anyway that will soon be dunked in 100C wort which one would hope will kill anything that might be there.
I cleaned the kettle and also rinsed it with sodium percarbonate, although not so fully as the fermenter. I do not really expect the infection comes from the kettle that spends an hour at 100C.
So.. I'm not really sure what to do from here. Is sodium percarbonate just not such a great steriliser? Do I need to use something else? Or are micro scratches in the plastic fermenter surface harbouring bacteria?
Any guesses about what the infection is, with a cider-like smell and very bitter, kind of plastic after taste?
I suppose I'll buy a new fermenter bucket, plastic spoon and siphon. My first brew sat in the keg too, so I guess that'll need to go!