Cap'n Squirrgle Wrote:
Daaaamn. So you're gonna floor malt, I guess?
Still in very early planning stages but I'm 90% sure I'll be using a food dehydrator.
Lots more research to do obviously.
So that I don't wreck it all I'll try to do a batch worth at a time.
I'm not expecting super good efficiency the first time around.
I think he planted enough for about 50 lbs.
bluejayway Wrote:
Home malting sounds very hardcore and I salute you. How would you even go about extracting a wild yeast, much less having any idea if it would like the chow and the environment?
I'm not sure what method I will try.
If they haven't been doused with chemicals, there is wild yeast on the skin of apples or other fruit.
We've got wild raspberries/blackberries/pears/apples and strawberries around.
But I think I'm more inclined to try this strictly airborne approach which I pulled from an HB forum.
Quote:
Figured I'd post this since everytime I mention it in the forums I get tons of questions. It's very easy to capture your own wild yeast. This is different than lambic brewing, since you can make "regular" styles with it (with a bit of a twist)! I love using the wild yeast I captured this way, it will eat its way thru anything.
Step 1) Clean & sanitize an empty glass jar.
Step 2) In it mix up a bit of DME with warm water. Not much, you want the gravity of the mixture to be 1.030 at most. You could try boiling it with a bit of hops, but I didn't do it that way.
Step 3) Leave it by an opened window until you start seeing bubbles and foam on top (I think it took me about 2 weeks). Awesome! Your culture of your local wild yeast is ready! You can now use it to start a beer!
How long you leave it out will affect what you get. If you use it right after you first start seeing signs of life (2 weeks) you will just get wild yeast. Leave it out longer and you will get other things in it. This is what happens (from Lambic by Guinard):
(3 to 7 days) Enteric Bacteria and Kloeckera Apiculata
(2 weeks) Saccharomyces
(3 to 4 months) Lactic Acid Bacteria
(8 months) Brettanomyces plus Pichia, Candida, Hansenula and Cryptococcus
Note that a group of microbes take over from the previous one, so for example, at two weeks, Saccaromyces has completely taken over and there is no Enteric Bacteria or Kloeckera left in your culture.
Ok well, now you know everything about capturing your own wild yeast! Hope it helped!
Added this to the wiki
I don't expect any of the beer to turn out as great as when I purchase right from the homebrew shop but I think I'll learn a lot in the process.
bluejayway Wrote:
Back in the day the goth kids just dumped beer and hard cider together for the lousy tasting and hangover inducing snakebite. Would doing it all at once be markedly different?
This episode sparked my interest. I will bastardize one of these recipes.
http://www.northernbrewer.com/connect/e ... make-graf/