Does your beer make you Fart?

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Mine does, but not in a snowflake way, I now fart like a proper eighties kid farted. Rank, smelly and lingering. No wonder they found a term called stalkers in the 90's and had them eradicated lol
 
This thread made my day, thank you posters, tears wiped away,,,

Being veggie, it's the better par(p) of life,,,,, = Happy bio system = big farts + add active beer and you should be able to do tunes,,,,
Hopefully without an encore, following through,,
 
It's the ghost farts that get me. You're like sniffing then "Who did that fekkin grievous fart!?" and there's nobody in the house and you're all puzzled where it came from. Then one day I shouted out who dropped that honker, was it you? And got told very convincingly that it was me and that I'd paused, tipped-the-hip and let her rip, then went straight on talking.

Did I do that and not remember? Am I the fart ghost?
 
If depents on the bear and yeast IMO.

Never trust a fart over 40 ashock1

Yeah, I will second this one and if you feel there is gas trapped in the pipe, never, never, ever push and try to force it out as you will probably get more than you bargained for....
 
Sometimes there is a dire need (Dire Rear?) to release because of uncomfortable pressure and thankfully there is a skill to be learnt, though I have never mastered it, and that is to stretch a cheek whilst sitting to enable gas to silently escape. Only the brave would attempt this, fraid it has not worked for me.
 
Sometimes there is a dire need (Dire Rear?) to release because of uncomfortable pressure and thankfully there is a skill to be learnt, though I have never mastered it, and that is to stretch a cheek whilst sitting to enable gas to silently escape. Only the brave would attempt this, fraid it has not worked for me.
Is that the end or are you going to follow through on that?
 
Excuse the uncouth question, but its been on my mind for a while and I think the wife is getting fed up with it (me farting that is, it not being on my mind).

Anyway, I’ve become quite fond of the festival ale kits due to the decent quality of the hop pellets and outright flavour but I’ve come to realise that maybe these Festival ales are not all entirely risk free. :hmm: So far I have made, Razorback, Golden Stag and the latest limited edition Summer glory, I also have the London Porter conditioning. Now I have noticed a trend with these that no matter how few or many pints I drink of an evening, I always end up effectively blowing off the duvet at night. During the summer I switched from the Festival Ales to try a Wilko’s Golden Ale and more recently a Bulldog Triple Tykes and both I have to say did not have the same after effects as the more favoured Festival ones (both were very tasty in their own right especially the Triple Tykes).

Now the only summation that I can gather from this is that there is something in the Festival Kits that doesn’t quite agree with me and the Mrs. One thing does spring to mind is that the Festival Kits are a very active bunch for the first few days when fermentation kicks in while my other brews are more constant. Would this have an effect?

Any biologically minded beer friends out there can shed some light on this? Can anyone agree with me? Is it down to the type of yeast? Should I use a cork at bed time? Sometimes it gets so bad that I fart in my sleep and it wakes me up, I’m just hoping to god that there is no follow through! :sick:
Funnily enough, I've just started reading charlie papazian's home brewers companion second edition 2002 (bought second-hand online); in a 422 page paperback, it has a 1/2 page (page 415 in my edition) on "gone with the wind - flatulence and beer"; his thesis is that cloudy. yeasty beer makes you fart and that if you have become a victim you might think of consulting a "holistic -minded physician" to "get your system back in balance". I kid you not. He's 3 years older than me and he's terrified of farts. Charlie, face it, at our age, farts are not whats going to kill you.
 
Gastro-intestinal disturbances are quite common and seems to be the live yeast that is the culprit. I know someone who suffers quite badly and has subsequently taken to pastuerising his bottled brews. I think this involves dunking them in hot, close to boiling water for a short time to kill off the yeast. Not sure if this has a negative impact on the beer itself though?
 
I know someone who suffers quite badly and has subsequently taken to pastuerising his bottled brews.
98% of the time when this sort of thing happens you can assume they're a malingering bellend. It's like 8 every 1000 is actually gluten wahh-wahh, 140 in every thousand think they are. I'm very much in the bellend until proven "Oh god, I'm sorry I didn't believe you!" camp. But hey, if it works it works. Say hi for me.
 
98% of the time when this sort of thing happens you can assume they're a malingering bellend. It's like 8 every 1000 is actually gluten wahh-wahh, 140 in every thousand think they are. I'm very much in the bellend until proven "Oh god, I'm sorry I didn't believe you!" camp. But hey, if it works it works. Say hi for me.
I'm inclined to agree. Getting a little off topic but I too have friends who have chosen to become gluten-free, just because.... it's fasionable?

I haven't actually seen the gastro-troubled person in question as he was a customer at the homebrew stored I used to manage. I assume it worked for him. I recall he was a retired biochemist.
 
98% of the time when this sort of thing happens you can assume they're a malingering bellend. It's like 8 every 1000 is actually gluten wahh-wahh, 140 in every thousand think they are. I'm very much in the bellend until proven "Oh god, I'm sorry I didn't believe you!" camp. But hey, if it works it works. Say hi for me.
blimey, sorry expatbrewer for triggering this response to your very reasonable and interesting post. I'm guessing (I may be wrong!) its due to time differences i.e. anyone posting in western europe right now is in the early hours, on a beer forum (why discuss general problems online on a beer forum at 2.30 unless...) either chronically sleep-deprived or drunk (I'm having a few; a few less than drunkula, but I'm trying to catch up).
 
blimey, sorry expatbrewer for triggering this response to your very reasonable and interesting post. I'm guessing (I may be wrong!) its due to time differences i.e. anyone posting in western europe right now is in the early hours, on a beer forum (why discuss general problems online on a beer forum at 2.30 unless...) either chronically sleep-deprived or drunk (I'm having a few; a few less than drunkula, but I'm trying to catch up).
It's not beer that makes me fart, it's breathing...!!
 
Not seen this thread before :D

Some of my brews do have me producing quite a bit of gas but others less so. Never really thought to monitor as to which particular brews are worst for it. Always thought it was just the yeast that caused it.
 
It's the yeast.
I'm 100% sure of this. Some yeasts ferment "clean", some "fruity" and others with a "sulphur" tang. It's the sulphur that you have to watch. Hydrogen sulphide = "rotten eggs" smell = very foul farts.
I always remember that, in my youth (well over 40 years ago) draught Bass was renowned as both the best-tasting beer, but also the one that made you fart most impressively. Very different to keg beers of the era.
In the early years of my marriage (early 1980s) we lived in Lancaster. There were two local breweries at the time - Mitchells and Yates & Jacksons. Yates & Jacksons was by far the better-tasting beer - a lovely pint - but by god did it produce unending foul farts! I've never experienced anything like it. I quickly agreed with my new wife to switch to Mitchells pubs. Not nearly such good beer, but a much better atmosphere in the bedroom later!
I've found this with my own brews. Some yeasts, no problem at all. Others, not a good smell! I've still never brewed anything to rival Yates & Jacksons though!!
 
Just done a series of beers using us05 and they are the worst yet as far as farting is concerned, my wife ended up on the sofa several nights. Early test results using London ale 3 seems to be much more stomach friendly for me.
I've only recently come to the conclusion that different yeasts have different fart effects but will be paying much closer attention in the future.

Can't see fart effects listed anywhere in the whitelabs specs asad.
 

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