Beer infection
Beer infection
Is there any way of knowing if your brews infected, without tasting it. I just don't want to ferment for 2 weeks, condition for another 2, then store for a few more weeks. It could be all a waste of time.
- Eric
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Re: Beer infection
What makes you fear infection?
Without patience, life becomes difficult and the sooner it's finished, the better.
Re: Beer infection
I'm not sure really, I just want my first brew to be drinkable at least. It's been fermenting for 6 days now, but tastes crap, and its full of gas. Not looking good so far.
- Eric
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- Posts: 2918
- Joined: Fri Mar 13, 2009 1:18 am
- Location: Sunderland.
Re: Beer infection
Sounds like you are making beer.
Leave it alone, would you ever judge a sausage or fish pie by taste before it was cooked? Like beer, you wouldn't predict what it might be like when properly cooked.
If your fermentation vessel is reasonably well sanitised and you avoid letting anything spurious get into it, after 3 days or so the yeast will finish primary fermentation and it shouldn't be infected. A few days later it should be ready to cask or bottle, but, until you have a little more experience, leave it covered and alone for, say, another ten days. Then, with everything sanitised as best you can, transfer the beer and leave the yeast, into bottles or keg with some priming sugar. That's when it starts to get hard to resist.
Leave it alone, would you ever judge a sausage or fish pie by taste before it was cooked? Like beer, you wouldn't predict what it might be like when properly cooked.
If your fermentation vessel is reasonably well sanitised and you avoid letting anything spurious get into it, after 3 days or so the yeast will finish primary fermentation and it shouldn't be infected. A few days later it should be ready to cask or bottle, but, until you have a little more experience, leave it covered and alone for, say, another ten days. Then, with everything sanitised as best you can, transfer the beer and leave the yeast, into bottles or keg with some priming sugar. That's when it starts to get hard to resist.
Without patience, life becomes difficult and the sooner it's finished, the better.
Re: Beer infection
Thanks for your advice, much appreciated. And yes it is beer, just a basic Coppers with dextrose. Going to bottle with a sugar tab in each. Although I might not bother, it seems gassy enough for some reason.
Re: Beer infection
Eric: that's a pretty good point re: fish pie. I'm brewing a lager at the moment and I've tasted it a couple of times from the test tube. It is proper crappy tasting. I have trust though that it will come good.
Nigel, I would put the drops in the bottles too. The sugar that the yeasties are eating in your bucket will soon run out. They'll need a bit more food to give your beer a nice head when they're in the bottle.
Nigel, I would put the drops in the bottles too. The sugar that the yeasties are eating in your bucket will soon run out. They'll need a bit more food to give your beer a nice head when they're in the bottle.
Re: Beer infection
Yeah I'm just going to add one. It says 2, but that's if my bottles are 700ml. They only 500. Hope your brew tasted as good as expected.