After some reading, thinking and discussing with a couple of guys who think they know something about sours ( ), I've decided on the following plan. This is heavily based on the details from a thread on HBT from 2016 that has good reviews for the recipe/process.
Batch size 3G (because I have a 3G carboy somewhere that will be perfect for this)
2.25 lbs of Wheat DME
Omega Lactobacillus Blend (OYL605)
Nottingham dry yeat (2 packs)
OG: 1.033
IBUs: 0
And it goes a little something like this:
1) Make a 100g/1L starter for the Omega Lacto blend 48 hours before brewday. No stirplate, put on an airlock and just leave it alone anywhere between 70 - 90F.
2) Brewday - Heat water to 200f, add DME and stir until its all dissolved. Cool the batch down to 90F, rack to carboy and pitch Lacto starter.
(This is why I am using the carboy instead of kettle-souring in the actual kettle)
3) Leave fermenter in the 70-90F range for 24-72 hours, depending on how sour a beer you want. I plan to use PH strips to target about 3.3. Once sourness has been achieved, rack back to the kettle and pasteurize for 30mins at 180F (I'll likely raise to boil, then let it sit - not boiling just cooling naturally for 30 minutes but staying above 180F).*Very Important - you need to be very careful not to oxygenate the wort or this could ruin the beer. To limit oxygen exposure use a smaller fermenter, or up the batch size, so that the fermenter is filled completely full leaving only about an inch of headspace between the wort and airlock. OYL605 doesn't krausen so don't be worried.
4) Cool to normal temp, pitch plenty of healthy yeast, and proceed like any other beer.
A couple notes:
- I would just pitch the Lacto in my kettle, but I would have too much headspace as I have a 10G kettle, so even a 5G batch would leave a lot of headroom plus I have no way of using my Thermowell and heater with my kettle (although I know BlackDuck was able to hold temps with blankets around his kettle so that is an option in the future if I want to do a bigger batch)
- I plan to flush the carboy with CO2 before and after filling it. I plan to fill to the neck so there will be very little headspace.
- I've also read that dropping the wort to 4.5 before pitching the Lacto is helpful:
-I plan on pitching 2 packets of Nottingham because of the ph of the wort. 1 packet is *likely* enough for a 3G batch, but 2 packets isn't a sever overpitch given the circumstances so I should be finePre-acidification of the wort to pH 4.5 using a food grade acid (lactic or phosphoric) will do wonders in inhibiting other bacterial strains that may be present such as enteric bacteria. This acidification will also hamper the action of an enzyme lactobacillus uses to break down proteins, so your resulting beer will still showcase all the head retention and body that you would expect from the same beer fermented with only Saccharomyces.
That's it. Once done, it should be a simple Berliner to use as a base for future tweaks and for testing the various syrups we have - along with drinking it straight.
From the notes/feedback on this recipe/process, I'll end up with a beer that darker than style guidelines dictate, but as the author noted - it's a trade-off in terms of convenience and ease. If this works out well, I'll do an all-grain batch in the future.
The only thing I need to play with now is the ph of the wort. I don't see a way to enter DME into EZ Water (which is my go-to tool) so I'll need to do some searching to determine how to get the ph of my wort since I don't have a ph meter (and don't plan to buy one at this time). I do have testing strips but assuming I come in around 5.5 or so, I may have to do some guess-work to see how much lactic acid to add to drop down to 4.5 - although I'm wondering if I just enter the DME as regular malts in EZ Water if that won't give me what I need.
The author of this recipe didn't drop his ph to 4.5 (I read that elsewhere) so if I can't do that step, I won't worry about it one bit.
My ingredients have been ordered since MoreBeer doesn't carry Omega yeast. I have to sit and wait for them to show up (sometime before 6/20 according to my order update).
More to come, but open to discussion and questions/input as always.