I use frozen fruit from Aldi and it works a treat just let it thaw and bring it to room temp before adding.
Yep I like the look of what he's made in that video, quite partial to Yonder pastry sour, so want to find an economical way of doing it, although frozen Aldi blueberries would be £20 rather than £60, I appreciate I could go trial and error with the volume, but don't think I have it in me to end up having to drink 100 pints of blueberry sour.Well to be fair does any sour resemble beer?
Was thinking dry hopping with complimentary hops for a couple of reasons...my assumption is the addition of the fruit (2kg of puree in this case in 23litres of beer) wont turn the beer into Mango juice as the majority of the actual fruit matter will drop out after fermentation, but I'm assuming it will leave some Mango elements for a nice Mango vibe running through the beer. But it will still be a beer with some bitterness, then the dry hops will just compliment the Mango vibe with some of the broader citrous and typical tropical fruity notes you get from modern US style hops. I'm kind of imagining something like Stones Tangerine Express, which is heavy on the tangerine thing but also has other citrous elements going on in the background.
Might be overreaching myself here, but I'll give it a go.
I've heard of fart-in-mah whitbread (famous javelin athlete) but never fart in my FVIt's best practise to get your beer off the yeast before you put the fruit in.
The first time I didn't do this (it was the husband actually) the beer tasted like farts.
I have one in secondary at the moment that has apricot puree in.
My brother used to call me that when we were growing up cos I was overweight LMFAO!I've heard of fart-in-mah whitbread (famous javelin athlete) but never fart in my FV
rehydrating yeast instead of just pitching it into the wort can help make up the gap. I've only used 2 packets once and no farts present in the beer (only after drinking perhaps )Google fu says that the fart taste and smell of beer is typically an off flavour due to under-pitching of yeast as the yeast cell walls deteriorate when yeast is stressed it produces a compound similar to that used to put the smell into our domestic gas supplies.
I have been reviewing my yeast pitch rates recently as I've come from AG kits that tend to be supplied with one 11g packet of yeast for 19litre batch, which, if you plug into the yeast manufacturers pitch rate calculators is not enough and typically 1.5 or so packets are needed. So I've now upped my yeast pitch rate across the board now I'm no longer brewing from AG kits.
I've never had a batch that exhibits typical under pitch off flavours, but then again I'm a serial yeast nutrient user..I know there are those who say it's pointless, but maybe that has saved my bacon so far after 70 batches of under pitched beer. My Goggle fu has not turned up anthing to explain yeast/fruit reactions that cause a fart smell/flavour in fruit beers, at least from a chemistry point of view, though I appreciate there are those who have had issues. I'm wondering if it's potentially due to contamination on the fruit..e.g. other wild yeasts present on the fruit or due to undertpitching of yeast? I know it doesn't explain why these off flavours are not present in batches that don't contain fruit.
However google fu also says there are alot of brewers who take the beer off the trub before adding fruit i.e. add in a secondary vessel, and those that don't and use it in the fermenter while primary fermentation is still active. Gotta love this hobby...like the English language, there is always an exception to the rule!
Yes exactly, it's risky if you don't, due to off flavours, farty or otherwise.However google fu also says there are alot of brewers who take the beer off the trub before adding fruit i.e. add in a secondary vessel,
I know @Hazelwood Brewery always racks to secondary when he makes a fruit beer
I've read that boiling blueberries is problematicThink he liquidised the fruit in a blender then boiled or heated it up. I don't like the idea of this as I think the boiling process might impact flavour or something...though jam is boiled. I just took the financial hit and bought a couple of packets of puree. If it turns out nice and fruit beers become a regular thing for me I'll look at more cost effective ways.
Farty flavours are often H2S. Common in homebrew and farmyard cider. It's volatile, so you can wait it out before packaging. Otherwise, run through copper pipe, or chuck an old penny in.The first time anybody gets farty flavours, don't say I didn't warn you
Boiling any fruit is problematic, causes very murky beer without pectolaseI've read that boiling blueberries is problematic
I’ve never tasted a fartIt's best practise to get your beer off the yeast before you put the fruit in.
The first time I didn't do this (it was the husband actually) the beer tasted like farts.
I have one in secondary at the moment that has apricot puree in.
I have - I have a husband who has a leaky ar$e in his sleepI’ve never tasted a fart
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