Would you keg this and see what it tastes like carbonated?

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Nah, I doubt it. He'd be tasting some sour/tart if it's been in the fermenter long enough to be bottled/kegged and there was enough oxygen exposure and lacto presence to promote pellicle formation. I would also expect some stringy like looking connections between the islands/across the more solid parts.John Sand wrote:Looks a lot like a lacto infection to me.
Sort of like, "if it feels good then do it." I will be sure to bleach bomb the hail out of it....berryman wrote:As long as it taste good in the fermenter it should be good carbed. I would really give your fermenter a good cleaning and sanitation after though. Maybe a bleach bomb too.
No fat added at all. The extras were some spices, baked pumpkin (400 for an hour with some brown sugar) and a little cinnamon extract. I put such small amounts in this batch that it didn't change the flavor profile. To me, this tastes like the first Oatmeal Stout extract I did.RickBeer wrote:Did you add anything with fat in it?
mashani wrote:Nah, I doubt it. He'd be tasting some sour/tart Nothing tart or off-tasting at all. It's actually one of my better tasting beers out of the fermenter. if it's been in the fermenter long enough to be bottled/kegged Three+ weeks in the fermenter. However, the first two weeks, the fermenter was 62-64 degrees and the last 10 days it has been at 74-76 degrees.and there was enough oxygen exposure and lacto presence to promote pellicle formation. I would also expect some stringy like looking connections between the islands/across the more solid parts.No strings whatsoever.John Sand wrote:Looks a lot like a lacto infection to me.
I'm pretty sure those are just yeast islands. They happen.
And just to make sure he doesn't freak out - even if it is lacto it's perfectly safe to drink if it tastes good (and even better for your gut, free probiotics). I would only freak out if that beer hit my gut then came right back out, either end.
Just do Berrymans fermenter bleach bomb if you want to be totally safe before you brew the next beer if you taste any sort of tart/sour down the line.![]()
EDIT, I looked at picture again, are those round bright areas / things I see actually big bubbles on top, or is it just because of the light/something on the fermenter? I can't tell if they are bubbles or not. Must be poor lighting. All the surface was flat except for a coupe fuzzy areas, but they were not bubbles. I could see them without the camera, but cannot see then in the pic.
If they are, then there may actually be a pellicle film on top, so there could be an early stage lacto or other thing going on in that case. Big bubbles should not form in a yeast island scenario, it should all be "flat". Puffy/fuzzy thick looking, a mixture of small and big bubbles, and stringy connections across the surface would all point to something else.I ain't scared.
But still it's safe to drink it if it tastes good, just bleach bomb your fermenter to be sure it doesn't happen again.
Regardless of what it is, this is very much true. Most beer bugs don't like it cold. Even most weird yeast like my house Brett C pretty much shuts down when it gets much below 60.Inkleg wrote:Kegged and kept cold flavor will remain about where it is till it kicks.