Morning all.
I have seen on this forum that a lot of members advocate the 2+2+2 system for brewing (2 weeks ferment, 2 weeks secondary, 2 weeks maturing), however whenever I have tried this, the brew has always ended up getting a wild yeast infection, spoiling the whole batch. I can certainly see the point of the above, but can't seem to get past the first stage before the batch is spoiled by infection.
I use a grainfather for brewing and always sterilize with a bleach mixture (concentration as recommended by Graham Wheeler in his book), which is run through the chiller, then boiling water and finally when the brew is finished, a final 15 minutes recirculating the wort through before pumping to fermenter.
My fermenter is a stainless steel 32 litre stock pot and lid (can't fit anything bigger in my fridge where I ferment the brew), and again I use a bleach solution for 15 minutes, rinse with water and then a final rinse with a campden tablet added to neutralize any remaining bleach. This is all done just before the end of brewing. Before finally pumping the brew in, I scold the fermenter with boiling water, put the lid on and leave for five minutes before draining and pumping the wort in.
Even by doing this, I cannot get the brew to go two weeks before it gets infected. This normally kicks in around day 10, so I have been stopping after 6-7 days (when FG is near or at where it should be), cold crashing and then kegging. Whilst this has solved the infection problem, I feel the brews would be better if I could leave them for longer to develop.
Can anyone shine a light on what I am doing wrong?
I have seen on this forum that a lot of members advocate the 2+2+2 system for brewing (2 weeks ferment, 2 weeks secondary, 2 weeks maturing), however whenever I have tried this, the brew has always ended up getting a wild yeast infection, spoiling the whole batch. I can certainly see the point of the above, but can't seem to get past the first stage before the batch is spoiled by infection.
I use a grainfather for brewing and always sterilize with a bleach mixture (concentration as recommended by Graham Wheeler in his book), which is run through the chiller, then boiling water and finally when the brew is finished, a final 15 minutes recirculating the wort through before pumping to fermenter.
My fermenter is a stainless steel 32 litre stock pot and lid (can't fit anything bigger in my fridge where I ferment the brew), and again I use a bleach solution for 15 minutes, rinse with water and then a final rinse with a campden tablet added to neutralize any remaining bleach. This is all done just before the end of brewing. Before finally pumping the brew in, I scold the fermenter with boiling water, put the lid on and leave for five minutes before draining and pumping the wort in.
Even by doing this, I cannot get the brew to go two weeks before it gets infected. This normally kicks in around day 10, so I have been stopping after 6-7 days (when FG is near or at where it should be), cold crashing and then kegging. Whilst this has solved the infection problem, I feel the brews would be better if I could leave them for longer to develop.
Can anyone shine a light on what I am doing wrong?