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Soured Fruit Beer

511 bytes added, 16:49, 21 June 2017
small update to Aging Vessels and Refermentation
Some producers use the term maceration to describe the addition of fruit or herbs to a beer. Maceration in beer is the extraction of flavor-active and colored compounds as well as other constituents of fruits and herbs by soaking them in the beer. The rate at which compounds are extracted during maceration depends on factors such as temperature and pH.
==Aging Vesselsand Refermentation==
In wood or steel (or glass or plastic).
When adding fruit to a non-pasteurized beer that does not contain living ''Brettnaomyces'' but does contain living ''S. cerevisiae'', a refermentation will often occur a day or two after adding the fruit. This re-fermetnation can last 1-2 weeks until the sugars from the fruit are fermented. Beers that are fully pasteurized, for example from a flash pasteurizer, will not re-ferment fruit because all of the yeast is dead.  When adding fruit to an aged, non-pasteurized sour beerthat contains ''[[Brettanomyces]]'', a secondary fermentation will generally occur after a few days of adding the fruit, and will last 1-2 months. A seven -day lag time is not unheard of, as this follows the growth cycle of many ''[[Brettanomyces]]'' strains. The visual indicators of this fermentation will depend on the strain(s) of ''Brettanomyces'' and other microbes that have survived the previous aging process, and can range from active fermentation to developing a pellicle to having no visual fermentation at all. Active fruit fermentation may cause fruit particles to clog the airlock or bung and prevent the vessel from venting pressure. This may cause the airlock to shoot off or worse. The Rare Barrel prevents this problem in vigorously re-fermenting beers by stabling foil over the bung holes of barrels of actively fermenting fruit beer rather than using a bung<ref name='Jester King on the Sour Hour pt. 1'>[http://www.thebrewingnetwork.com/the-sour-hour-episode-14/ The Sour Hour #14: with Jester King, pt. 1]</ref> (~52 minutes in). Raf Soef uses stainless mesh from a tea ball on the bottom of bungs to prevent fruit pieces from clogging the bung or airlock <ref>[https://www.facebook.com/groups/MilkTheFunk/permalink/1156796387681907/ Raf Soef's tea strainer modification]</ref>. Raf also suggests filling only 80% of the capacity of the vessel with fruit and beer, and then topping up after the re-fermentation of the fruit <ref>[https://www.facebook.com/groups/MilkTheFunk/permalink/1186697904691755/?comment_id=1186735661354646&comment_tracking=%7B%22tn%22%3A%22R%22%7D Conversation with Raf Soef on MTF regarding re-fermentation of fruit and dealing with blow off. 11/30/2015.]</ref>.
When using whole fruit, it is typical for the fruit to be carried to and held at the top of the fermenter due to carbonation. Some producers have voiced concern over the fruit sitting for prolonged periods of time in contact with air and prefer to push the fruit cap down periodically (and to ferment in such a vessel as to allow this)<ref name='Jester King on the Sour Hour pt. 1'/> (~40 minutes in). If you are fermenting in carboys and feel that you are getting acetic character from the fruit cap being in contact with air you can swirl the carboy periodically. Note that many who have used whole fruit have not noticed any problem with a fruit cap being in contact with air, so you may or may not find that this is a concern for you<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/groups/MilkTheFunk/permalink/1170422922985920/ MTF facebook thread about fruit caps]</ref>.

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