I'm not even sure why you would do what he described instead of kettle souring, your basically doing the same thing at that point.FedoraDave wrote:Wow.
My plan has changed. I went to the LHBS yesterday and spoke to the guy at length about what process/technique might be best for me. I mentioned that I was considering just leaving it to the yeast to do its thing. But he said that the only problem with that is that it could be notoriously variable from one batch to the next. I might really love my first batch, and then really hate my second batch, even though I did everything as identically as I could. The vagaries of yeast.
So he mentioned that I could do the following:
Make a starter with lacto and apple juice (lacto apparently likes apple juice). Then bring my wort up to hot break and cool it down to around 80 degrees or so and add the starter until I've gotten the tartness I want. After that, bring it to a boil for ten minutes and add whatever hops I want at flame-out. Chill to 70 or so, pitch a regular German Ale yeast, and ferment at a higher-than-usual temperature.
This will give me more control over the amount of sourness/tartness, dialing it in to my personal taste. Boiling will kill the lacto, so no more activity will occur. The hop addition is minimal, and as long as I keep the IBU under 10, it won't cause problems.
So I think this is what I'll be doing. It gives me more control, and it's something I can do with my facilities/equipment.
Also, FYI (FYI for anyone) apple juice has everything in it that regular beer yeast needs too. As in you can use apple juice to make regular yeast starters too if you want.
Also, you should use a pure lacto strain then instead of the blended strain for that initial pitch / sour then. No point in using the blended strain if your just going to kill off the sacc that comes with it. (this is probably what he told you but...)
FWIW, my experience using the blended strain in the past is that it isn't that variable as long as you are mashing and fermenting at the same temps and pitching yeast with about the same age on it. White labs and Wyeast are very careful about the ratios of lacto to hefe yeast.
And of course the downside of all of this (same with kettle sour) is you don't get any probiotic benefits. Where you do with a real sour, especially when fresh.
And, I'll just say this again for the sake of it. I see no point in kettle souring with lacto, or doing a short souring ferment with lacto and then boiling it to kill it or doing some other "'Merican" version of overlay sanitary/sanitized and highly controlled souring, vs. just using a bunch of acidulated malt to get to the PH you want to sour to. Acidulated malt *is* lacto soured. It is basically "work has been done for you by the maltster" version of the same thing, in convenient malty format. It is putting the same "stuff" into your wort, it gives you the same level of control, and you don't have to mess with bugs or temps at all. So... why not?
The idea that you will get more "complexity" when using pure lacto to kettle sour vs. that is silly. Lacto like that over that type of timeframe on its own doesn't make complexity. It makes lactic acid and alcahol. Doesn't matter what strain of lacto it is - that's what it makes. It doesn't make phenols or esters. It makes lactic acid and alcohol. It may do it slower or faster depending on temps. But that's what you will get. The only other thing you might get is dacetyl, but if it is a lot, then it typically comes from other lactic acid producing bacteria like Pedio (it makes a crap load of it which is why aging is really important if pedio is in the mix), and not any kind of lacto you will get as a pure pitch lacto strain that can do the souring job in a day or two.
Now if you are sloppy and don't pitch enough lacto then some kind of Enterobacteria might get into the mix up front and make some sort of flavor, depending on what it is and how long it works it could quite possibly be one that is nasty, before the lacto takes off, but it will die as soon as your PH goes below 4.4 or so, or you hit around 2% alcohol, whichever comes first. (that is why fermentation makes things safe, be it yeast or lacto, beer or pickles or kraut or kimchee - but also why its best to get your fermentation going quickly be it with sacc or lacto or whatever it is that you are using to make the PH/alcohol changes happen. Not holding picky lacto strains at a temp they work well at could cause this to happen too. That's why temp control if you actually do a true sour mash with the grains in the pot is pretty important, as in this case there are a whole bunch of bugs, lacto, wild yeast, all in the mix, and you are trying to favor the lacto and suppress the enterobacteria. But done right this is why an actual sour mash (not kettle sour / sanitized boiled cooled worth with a pure lacto pitch) can have increased complexity. Your letting all sorts of bugs fight it out, all of which make some bit of flavor, but maybe not very much if done right - just enough to make it "different" - but with the right type of environment to make the ones you want like lacto to win win over a short enough time to kill all the other buggersl so it stays "not too much". But if done wrong, then other bugs win more, and it might turn out as hideous tasting stuff.
But none of this is happening in what you described as a process. Your just making lactic acid and alcohol, and all the other bugs are already dead.
True "complexity" really becomes something when you talk about mixed culture sours like that 3 year sour mentioned in other posts. Stuff with lacto, pedio, brett, and sacc all mixed together in some combo and giving time to do their thing. But not quick pure lacto sours. It takes pedio 50x longer then sacc or lacto to get going and do its thing. Brett anywhere from 2x to 50x as long depending on the type and inoculation rate. (this is why lots of true bug farm sours change tremendously with long aging). And sometimes blending of batches, which is common for real aged mixed sours.
But that's not lacto. Anyone who thinks a pure lacto kettle sour or short timeframe highly controlled pure lacto ferment/boil/kill quickly because its scary or what not tastes more complex then using acidulated malt to make a sour, is imagining things. Heck you could just buy some lactic acid and add it and end up with the same results and even more control if control is your thing.
Anyways, that is my sour rant of the day LOL.