dannythemanny
Well-Known Member
Hi all,
Bit of a long post here but I'll be very interested to hear people's thoughts...
I took a break from brewing a couple of years ago, but still had your 15kg of pale malt. I kept this sealed and dry. I brewed a beer with it last summer (which I stared another thread about back then) because on racking, I discovered a patchy pink tinge to the bottom of my plastic FV. I ended up chucking the batch because it didn't taste very good and I was a little concerned about whatever caused the bucket to turn pink. I couldn't get it out with Oxy, scrubbing or anything else. Additionally, when I threw it out, I took a hydrometer reading and it was close to zero.
I assumed my beer had fallen victim to a gusher bug somewhere along the line, and chucked out all post-boil plastic that had contacted the beer.
I've just gotten around to brewing again, and was in two minds about whether to use the same malt. I've heard that Fusarium can turn things pink and when it manifests itself in crops it turns them a red/pink colour. However, boiling should surely kill anything that was living on the malt, so how could that be the culprit? Anyway, after a thorough cleaning and sanitising process and using the same malt, I brewed another beer. Went a bit over my target OG of 1.054 and hit 1.058. This was a week ago. It's been fermenting at approx 18C for a week and a gravity reading says it's down to 1.004! Obviously something's gone awry again, but I'm using all new plastic gear and fermenting in glass now.
My question is: What type of infection could this be? Only thing I can think is if the grains do have something nasty on them and I have doughed-in too close to where I've transferred out of the kettle and some dust has lingered in the air for upwards of two hours and made its way into the cooled wort..? Seems unlikely, but unless there's just something in the air, then I can't fathom where this infection is coming from. Other thing is, could it be that something is living on the malt and not being killed in the boil and thus making its way into the fermenter?
A further question I have is this: if an unwanted guest is responsible for fermenting my beer below my target FG (a wild yeast/bacteria), does it necessarily convert the sugar into alcohol, or could it produce some other by products instead? If I brew a beer with an OG of 1.058 and it goes into a never-ending fermentation and gets down to 1.004, is it necessarily 7%ABV?
Final question - if this beer that I currently have 20 litres of tastes ok even with a SG of 1.004, and bearing in mind what I've described above - would you drink it or chuck it?
Thanks for any help.
Dan
Bit of a long post here but I'll be very interested to hear people's thoughts...
I took a break from brewing a couple of years ago, but still had your 15kg of pale malt. I kept this sealed and dry. I brewed a beer with it last summer (which I stared another thread about back then) because on racking, I discovered a patchy pink tinge to the bottom of my plastic FV. I ended up chucking the batch because it didn't taste very good and I was a little concerned about whatever caused the bucket to turn pink. I couldn't get it out with Oxy, scrubbing or anything else. Additionally, when I threw it out, I took a hydrometer reading and it was close to zero.
I assumed my beer had fallen victim to a gusher bug somewhere along the line, and chucked out all post-boil plastic that had contacted the beer.
I've just gotten around to brewing again, and was in two minds about whether to use the same malt. I've heard that Fusarium can turn things pink and when it manifests itself in crops it turns them a red/pink colour. However, boiling should surely kill anything that was living on the malt, so how could that be the culprit? Anyway, after a thorough cleaning and sanitising process and using the same malt, I brewed another beer. Went a bit over my target OG of 1.054 and hit 1.058. This was a week ago. It's been fermenting at approx 18C for a week and a gravity reading says it's down to 1.004! Obviously something's gone awry again, but I'm using all new plastic gear and fermenting in glass now.
My question is: What type of infection could this be? Only thing I can think is if the grains do have something nasty on them and I have doughed-in too close to where I've transferred out of the kettle and some dust has lingered in the air for upwards of two hours and made its way into the cooled wort..? Seems unlikely, but unless there's just something in the air, then I can't fathom where this infection is coming from. Other thing is, could it be that something is living on the malt and not being killed in the boil and thus making its way into the fermenter?
A further question I have is this: if an unwanted guest is responsible for fermenting my beer below my target FG (a wild yeast/bacteria), does it necessarily convert the sugar into alcohol, or could it produce some other by products instead? If I brew a beer with an OG of 1.058 and it goes into a never-ending fermentation and gets down to 1.004, is it necessarily 7%ABV?
Final question - if this beer that I currently have 20 litres of tastes ok even with a SG of 1.004, and bearing in mind what I've described above - would you drink it or chuck it?
Thanks for any help.
Dan