...but it IS the first time I have fallen off!
As I said in my intro, I've been making beer at home using the 'kit and a kilo' method for around 40 years. The kits are mostly ales or bitters from Youngs, Coopers, John Bull or Simply.
My method hasn't changed, I use a white plastic 25l bin and lid, scalded with boiling water before the sugar goes in, the wort is maintained at around 21C with an aquarium heater and the tub is wrapped with bubblewrap to save energy (it does get cold in Orkney). I don't measure the OG but use a hydrometer to check the brew at bottling, which is anyway indicated by a cessation of bubbles on the surface and a promising taste. The beer is auto-siphoned into cleaned 1-litre Pellegrino green PET mineral water bottles and primed with a 5ml spoonful of granulated sugar.
About four weeks ago my HB shop ran out of my usual brands so I bought 3 cans - Geordie Bitter and Geordie Yorkshire Bitter.
I misplaced the yeast sachet from the first can and used Youngs Wine and Beer yeast instead.
The brew foamed dramatically to start with but after about one week, when I would be expecting it to be nearly ready, I noticed a milky film on the surface, never seen before. A question on another forum brought the suggestion to give it a good stir and wait another couple of days. I did that, but by then the tub looked like a witch's cauldron so I bottled it anyway hoping for the best. It didn't actually taste 'bad'. I learned a new word - "pellicle" - from the internet. The second fermentation didn't really happen but the taste improved after one week and an experimental addition of sugar yesterday produced an instant foaming.
So, thinking about how the brew got infected, I figured that it had to be from the aquarium heater, so that and everything else in the fermentation cycle got a good soaking in a VWP cleaner & steriliser solution before the next batch, Geordie Bitter, was started. Now, about 7 days in, it too looks infected. Video attached. The 3rd can, Geordie Yorkshire Bitter, is already two days into its brew.
What am I doing wrong, or forgetting to do?
Thanks in advance, HTB
As I said in my intro, I've been making beer at home using the 'kit and a kilo' method for around 40 years. The kits are mostly ales or bitters from Youngs, Coopers, John Bull or Simply.
My method hasn't changed, I use a white plastic 25l bin and lid, scalded with boiling water before the sugar goes in, the wort is maintained at around 21C with an aquarium heater and the tub is wrapped with bubblewrap to save energy (it does get cold in Orkney). I don't measure the OG but use a hydrometer to check the brew at bottling, which is anyway indicated by a cessation of bubbles on the surface and a promising taste. The beer is auto-siphoned into cleaned 1-litre Pellegrino green PET mineral water bottles and primed with a 5ml spoonful of granulated sugar.
About four weeks ago my HB shop ran out of my usual brands so I bought 3 cans - Geordie Bitter and Geordie Yorkshire Bitter.
I misplaced the yeast sachet from the first can and used Youngs Wine and Beer yeast instead.
The brew foamed dramatically to start with but after about one week, when I would be expecting it to be nearly ready, I noticed a milky film on the surface, never seen before. A question on another forum brought the suggestion to give it a good stir and wait another couple of days. I did that, but by then the tub looked like a witch's cauldron so I bottled it anyway hoping for the best. It didn't actually taste 'bad'. I learned a new word - "pellicle" - from the internet. The second fermentation didn't really happen but the taste improved after one week and an experimental addition of sugar yesterday produced an instant foaming.
So, thinking about how the brew got infected, I figured that it had to be from the aquarium heater, so that and everything else in the fermentation cycle got a good soaking in a VWP cleaner & steriliser solution before the next batch, Geordie Bitter, was started. Now, about 7 days in, it too looks infected. Video attached. The 3rd can, Geordie Yorkshire Bitter, is already two days into its brew.
What am I doing wrong, or forgetting to do?
Thanks in advance, HTB