cheeseyfeet
Regular.
Hi Guys,
Yesterday I started my first kettle sour. I'm doing it in my Robobrew, I mashed as normal, sparged, did a quick 10 min boil, brought it down to 40C then pitched 10g of Lallemand WildBrew SourPitch. I set the thermostat on the Robobrew to 38C and left just the low power element switched on.
I have the solid lid that takes advantage of the lid clips on the Robobrew and it has a fairly hefty gasket on it, so I clipped this on leaving one loose - as I had a masterplan for removing Oxygen!
I used to use pressure barrels ages ago and had a load of the CO2 bulbs kicking about, so crafted the following from an old PB cap, bulb assembly, some hose and a camlock fitting.
Locking the camlock into the output from the pump at the top of the recirc gave me a perfect route back down into the bottom of the kettle to inject CO2 and hopefully scrub some oxygen. I did this succesfully with 4 bulbs, then tightented up the remaining lid clip.
Then I think I made my mistake - realising that I now have essentially a sealed vessel, I wasn't sure if lacto fermentation created gas, so didn't want the Robobrew pressuring up.
To resolve this I reused the hose and stuck the end in a jug of starsan, essentially creating an airlock.
I tucked it up to bed for the night. When I went to take a sample at lunchtime today the jug was near empty as all of the starsan had been sucked into the kettle!!
Not to worry I thought , 1.5l of starsan in about 28l of wort - I can live with this. The sample came out at PH 3.9 so a wee way to go. I took another sample tonight and also got a reading of PH 3.9. Thats when it hit me, has that starsan killed the Lacto?
Does starsan kill Lactobacillus?
Bugger! I'm thinking I'll do the following.
Let it ride tonight and see what the PH is tomorrow.
If still no change then I'll use lactic acid to bring it down to 3.1 and carry on with the boil, hopping and fermentation. Crossing my fingers!
Can anyone with experience help?
Cheers!
Yesterday I started my first kettle sour. I'm doing it in my Robobrew, I mashed as normal, sparged, did a quick 10 min boil, brought it down to 40C then pitched 10g of Lallemand WildBrew SourPitch. I set the thermostat on the Robobrew to 38C and left just the low power element switched on.
I have the solid lid that takes advantage of the lid clips on the Robobrew and it has a fairly hefty gasket on it, so I clipped this on leaving one loose - as I had a masterplan for removing Oxygen!
I used to use pressure barrels ages ago and had a load of the CO2 bulbs kicking about, so crafted the following from an old PB cap, bulb assembly, some hose and a camlock fitting.
Locking the camlock into the output from the pump at the top of the recirc gave me a perfect route back down into the bottom of the kettle to inject CO2 and hopefully scrub some oxygen. I did this succesfully with 4 bulbs, then tightented up the remaining lid clip.
Then I think I made my mistake - realising that I now have essentially a sealed vessel, I wasn't sure if lacto fermentation created gas, so didn't want the Robobrew pressuring up.
To resolve this I reused the hose and stuck the end in a jug of starsan, essentially creating an airlock.
I tucked it up to bed for the night. When I went to take a sample at lunchtime today the jug was near empty as all of the starsan had been sucked into the kettle!!
Not to worry I thought , 1.5l of starsan in about 28l of wort - I can live with this. The sample came out at PH 3.9 so a wee way to go. I took another sample tonight and also got a reading of PH 3.9. Thats when it hit me, has that starsan killed the Lacto?
Does starsan kill Lactobacillus?
Bugger! I'm thinking I'll do the following.
Let it ride tonight and see what the PH is tomorrow.
If still no change then I'll use lactic acid to bring it down to 3.1 and carry on with the boil, hopping and fermentation. Crossing my fingers!
Can anyone with experience help?
Cheers!
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