Alternative Bacteria Sources
Sources for Lactic Acid Bacteria, especially Lactobacillus, are available in various forms such as unpasteurized products and probiotics. This page contains a list of sources that Milk The Funk members have experimented with, and their results. Note that the production of products such as probiotics may not be as sanitary as brewing industry yeast manufacturers, so without isolating these bacteria on agar plates, they should not be considered pure cultures.
Yogurt Souring
Brands of Yogurt
In general, non-fat Greek yogurt that is unpasteurized works best. Brands of yogurt that have been reported to be successful with this method:
- Fage Yogurt [3]
- Greek Gods [3]
- Nancy's Yogurt [4]
- Seven Stars yogurt - Mike Karnowski reported pH of 3.3 after 20 hours @ 110 F. Zero drop in gravity. Clean, soft lactic tartness, with the usual Lacto sulfur aroma that boils off [5].
Culturing Lactobacillus From Grains
- In a 2L flask make a standard starter wort (1.040 OG).
- Add 1/2 tsp 88% lactic acid (should get pH down < 4.5).
- Add 2 cups uncrushed malt (using acidulated malt is not required).
- Top off with carbonated water.
- Cap with an airlock.
- Keep as warm as you can for 2-3 days, ~110°F is best.
- After 2-3 days, strain the grains out using a colander. Pitch the entire starter into the wort using one of the methods described on the Sour Worting page.
Culturing from Probiotics
Some commercial probiotics have been successfully used to produce Lactobacillus cultures (many brands have also failed at providing usable bacteria according to some homebrewers [7]). As a general rule of thumb, it should be noted that these probiotics may not be as free of contaminates as pure cultures from brewing industry yeast labs. The following probiotics are examples of brands, methods, and results that MTF members have had [8]. Dried forms of Lactobacillus should be stored refrigerated because viability has been seen to decrease as much as 80x when stored at room temperatures [9].
- Drew Wham has used GoodBelly products as a source of L. planetarium with good results in over 12 batches. Their products contain 20 billion cells of the 229v L. planetarium strain per serving. In a 5 gal batch a single serving will reduce the pH to 3.2 in 48-72 hours held at 95°F.
- Swanson Probiotics L. planatarum, reported by Ed Coffey. 3 capsules were used in 750ml of a DME starter wort, plus yeast nutrients for 24 hours at 90°F. The starter was pitched into 3 gallons of Gose wort. 72 hours of Lacto only ferment at 95°F resulted in a 3.31pH. No gravity reading taken.
- Dan Graston also used the Swanson Probiotics: 1 capsule in 1 quart of canned starter wort (1.039, 4.44pH, not DME) at 90°F. Starter pH barely dropped for first 24 hours because the Lacto powder just sank to the bottom and never went into suspension, which was unexpected. After rousing, the pH dropped to 3.23 over the next 36 hours. No drop in gravity. Test starter, so no beer was produced.
- LactoGG, reported by Allen Stone. 2 capsules were used in 1 liter of 1.030 wort, and held in high 90°F's for 72 hours before stepping up to 5 liters and pitched after another 7 days. The powder from the capsules fell to the bottom of the starter initially and needed rousing before it started fermenting.
- ProViva SuperFrukt (Sweden), good results reported by Viktor Nyman on MTF [10].
See Also
Additional Articles on MTF Wiki
- Sour Worting
- Commercial Sour Beer Inoculation
- Mixed Fermentation
- Wild Yeast Isolation
- Lactobacillus
- Pediococcus
External Resources
References
- ↑ Lactobacillus acidophilus Wikipedia page. Retrieved 3/3/2015.
- ↑ Conversation with Mike Karnowski of Green Man Brewery on the MTF Facebook group. 3/3/2015.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Mark Fry on the MTF Facebook group. 2/19/2015.
- ↑ Brewing with Yogurt. The Not So Professional Beer Blog. Retrieved 3/3/2015.
- ↑ Conversation with Mike Karnowski on MTF about Seven Stars Yogurt. 6/17/2015.
- ↑ Conversation with Derek Springer on Milk The Funk. 4/4/2015.
- ↑ Conversation on Reddit. April 2015.
- ↑ Conversation on MTF about using Probiotics. 5/22/2015.
- ↑ Conversation with Bryan Heit on Milk The Funk. 05/04/2015.
- ↑ Conversation with Viktor Nyman on Probiotics available in Sweden on MTF. 5/27/2015.