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Cake day: July 31st, 2023

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  • if you’re kegging the beers and are going to keep the keg cold for the entire time, you can probably just sweeten the beer without pasteurizing or sorbating, the residual yeast in the beer is probably not going to be very active at fridge temps (though I have had some wild yeasts keep on fermenting stuff in the fridge).

    Alternatively you can also mash hotter to produce a wort with fewer fermentable sugars which will result in a sweeter finished beer, you can also reduce the bitterness of your hopping to swing the balance of the beer flavor towards the sweeter side of things.

    I’d try all of that before attempting to low temp pasteurize your beer.












  • Thanks! I’m not planing on using hibiscus or rose, I’m wanting to produce a ‘gin’ with all botanicals grown on my property. Was thinking of using cypress and blue spruce boughs for the ‘juniper’ (hence the ‘gin’), I’ve got a bit of coriander seed I grew this summer, dried lemon balm, and elderflowers. I’ve also got mugwort, rosemary, lavender, costmary, mint, and some other stuff. I’m not sure I’m gonna use any of those or not yet.




  • A number of years back someone posted the idea of pumpkin gin to the homebrewing subreddit. Supposedly some senator arguing against prohibition in the early 1900s claimed you could just hollow out a pumpkin, fill it up with sugar and you’d end up with booze. So I gave it a try. One pumpkin I filled up with apple juice and another I filled with brown sugar. The apple juice pumpkin actually fermented and I got a somewhat drinkable hard cider out of the deal. the sugar one just turned to sludge and grew mold.

    Another thing I tried was to make my own amylase producing mold using millet and rice cakes and ginger root to inoculate it. They grew mold (some of it white, some of it green) and I used them to inoculate some steamed rice that sort of fermented. It went sour of course, and it ended up tasting a lot like lemon juice, so I must have gotten some citric acid producing mold in the mix as well.




  • I’ve been using wild yeast for various beers, wines, etc since 2012

    I’ve made tepache a few times and it will go alcoholic if you leave it too long. if the abv is 2-3+% then it’s likely safe to consume (if you’re overly concerned you can also check to confirm that the pH is below 4). However there probably won’t be any residual sugar and it may not taste all that great.


  • I made moscato wine from my grapes a couple of weeks ago and then a second wine that fermented on the skins that I pressed last weekend.

    My apples have been harvested so I will probably grind and press those either this week sometime or next weekend to make hard cider.

    I finally finished picking all the hops (Glacier and Mt Hood/Tettnang) off the bines that I harvested 3 weeks ago, I’m don’t have any plans for any sort of fresh hop beer or anything but I would like to maybe brew something soon. I was thinking about a high (50+%) wheat saison while using chopped up wheat straw in the mash for a filter aid and fermenting with some of my wild yeast cultures.