Wed Sep 08, 2010 3:40 pm
did you aerate your batch? Even though this blend has lactobacillus it still can be aerated before pitching and the saccharomyces strain present would probably benefit from this. If your sanitation procedures are good, i really wouldn't worry too much about infections from other critters as the blend that you pitched will eventually take hold and drop the pH to the point where no other critters can survive. Last year I brewed a Flanders Pale and pitched the WY roselare blend in the primary. 48 hrs+ went by before any fermentation took place. I of course panicked and pitched half a packet of fermentis T-58. The batch took off the next day and I am still unsure which yeast did the work (if not both). After 7 days I racked the beer into a carboy with oak for aging and the gravity was 1020. 15 mos later just took a tasting and the product was mildly sour with a funky tart green apple thing (not really acetaldehyde). Half of the batch left in the carboy to age longer while the other half got 6# of fresh peaches. Sour wild beers definitely have a mind of their own and will tell YOU when the time is right.
"A bad man is a good man's job, while a good man is a bad man's teacher."