
gerber by bassplayinsweets, on Flickr

Gerber Mash by bassplayinsweets, on Flickr
Moderator: Site Moderator
I can attest to the fact that at least sometimes you can go a LONG time before running a batch. I had 2 6 gallon batches of all grain that I'd fermented and filtered out and kept in 2 6 gallon better bottles (large water cooler type PET carboys mainly used for wine making). I didn't get a chance to run them before it go to warm for me to distill in the garage so I left them in the better bottles all summer long. Temps hit 90°F+ in the garage. I just ran them this past week and they turned out great. No off odors in the washes before distilling and nothing out of the ordinary once distilled.cannonman wrote:I have a question: How long can I keep the batch before it goes bad?? I can not run it till this week end and It was done running this past Sat. It will be a week between finish and run time. I have Included two pics. One with a flash and one with-out. There is floaties on top. I am guessing that this is the gerber baby food floating??? Or the yeast??? Any Ideas?![]()
![]()
Hi Athirilathiril wrote:Can anyone post the nutrients listing from the Gerber's box so I can find something similar? We dont have Gerber's here.
You can use whatever amount of yeast you like... The reason behind the amount of yeast specified is to reduce the lag time between pitching and the anaerobic fermentation phase which in turn reduces overall fermentation time... The yeast colony is going to grow to a specific cell density within the wash anyway, as I have recently explained elsewhere in these forums... This recipe was originally intended to help ween novices off turbo yeast washes and keeping pace with the fermentation process was one of the aspects that was considered... Plus I always over-pitch because bakers yeast is cheap when purchased in bulk... If you're happy with a 5g - 7g packet of yeast then it's perfectly alright to go that route... If you want to pitch up to 2 tablespoons per gallon, that's fine too... I wouldn't go any higher than that, however...F0xtr0t wrote:I was wondering about the yeast quantity. It seems high. Is this because of a lack of nutrients or because you will have a lot of yeast die off due to high abv or lack of nutrients. Although with the vitamins and cereal should there be enough nutrients to able to put like 1 tbls? Or is this because of the bread yeast so if you used distillers yeast you could drop the quanity.
You interpreted correctly... All measurements are by volume... That keeps things simple whether US or metric measurement standards... 250ml of Gerber per 4 liters of wash...Odin wrote:Just starting up my first Gerber now. Do I interpret correctly when I say "for every 4 liters you need a cup of Gerber". And "a cup" being 250 ml or - otherwise put - a quarter of a liter? Please don't tell me a cup of gerber means actually not 250 ml but 250 grams, because than I am short. One liter weights about 250 grams. Ehm ...... you know, just please let me know if I am on the right track. So, yes!, please dó tell me!
Also put 1 gram of wyeast nutrients in on 20 liters total.
Odin.
Your gona half the turbo yeast?tomgndallas wrote:small correction, I am gonna go halvsies on the pack of yeast, i think it might slow things down a bit and lead to a better wash. any thoughts?
also, a really dumb noob question...when you are taking your initial samples for SG, how do you do this? You stick a turkey baster or something in there and suck out a sample? put it in the tube and float the hydrometer? just curious if there is a "best practice" for this.
Hey Rad I have read this many times. But all the batches I have made turned this color before I could even get it to simmer. Matter of fact its been turning that color as soon as I add the sugar and mix it in. But I have been still going through the process just to be safe. So why is like this? I assumed it was the sugar I was using?rad14701 wrote:For invert sugar, watch for the liquid to start turning a light straw color - usually 30 - 45 minutes at a low simmer...