Guest guest Posted December 28, 2009 Report Share Posted December 28, 2009 I been reading this book Wild Brews and it talks about dominant microorganisms in sequential stages of fermentation for beer. Saccharomyces are dominant for 1 day Lactobacillus 1 week Pediococcus 3 to 4 weeks Brettanomyces 8 months I was wondering if saccharomyces can be bypassed by innoculating the ferment really good. He made it sound like sacc don't contribute the best flavor. Also, whats the longest any1 here fermented anything? I have only had something last a month so far before I ate it. I am very small scale. Can yogurt can better after a month? (havent tried yet) It seems to me that the later dominant organisms can make the ferments even tastier. Or do you then risk the ferments also become deadly? I was just wondering. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2009 Report Share Posted December 28, 2009 Most things keep fermenting at a slower rate even in the fridge, so we keep our kraut for many months. I haven't had anything go " bad " exactly ... sometimes vegie ferments get mushy and sort of sweet, not appetizing. Generally they get quite acidic and at that point, the bad bacteria just don't grow, nor does mold. However, when you buy cheeses that are aged for 90 days ... well, that cheese is at least 3 months old! Beer that I've made generally gets bitter or acidic if kept too long though. I haven't found that it keeps well. I've made beer using a kefir grain as a starter ... kefir grains have a kind of yeast in them, but also bacteria of various sorts. The resulting brew tastes a lot like lambic ale, and is super easy to make. On Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 12:09 PM, BooBoo <eauclaire101@...> wrote: > I been reading this book Wild Brews and it talks about dominant microorganisms in sequential stages of fermentation for beer. > > Saccharomyces are dominant for 1 day > Lactobacillus 1 week > Pediococcus 3 to 4 weeks > Brettanomyces 8 months > > I was wondering if saccharomyces can be bypassed by innoculating the ferment really good. He made it sound like sacc don't contribute the best flavor. > > Also, whats the longest any1 here fermented anything? I have only had something last a month so far before I ate it. I am very small scale. Can yogurt can better after a month? (havent tried yet) It seems to me that the later dominant organisms can make the ferments even tastier. Or do you then risk the ferments also become deadly? I was just wondering. > > > > ------------------------------------ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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