Tue Mar 31, 2015 5:31 am
Using the hand-full of malt method for creating a lacto starter, can and should produce slight butyric or enteric aromas, even when in an anaerobic environment. However without oxygen, they are rapidly overwhelmed and their flavor and aroma products consumed by the on-going bacterial competition. The acidification will generally produce a near-monoculture of lacto.
As an experiment, I created a malt-based lacto starter in a foil covered flask with 100F heating. That worked out very well. I then created my Berliner wort and transferred that to a standard 5 gal corny keg and added the starter. Even though the wort filled the keg to within a 1/4 inch, lacto does not produce a head during its fermentation and there were no problems. I just vented the keg daily. Of course, the keg was also heated to almost 100F. This technique worked very well and will become my standard. That soured wort was then boiled for an hour. By the way, when poured from the keg into the kettle, the wort produced a HUGE and dense head.
By the way, I finished the calculations for adding an appropriate level of acetic acid to Berliner Weisse. Using the typically available 5% distilled vinegar from the grocery store, it turns out that it takes between 6 and 12 mL of distilled vinegar per liter of beer to produce the appropriate level of acetic acid found in great BW's. I checked the effect of the 6 mL/L addition by adding it to RO water and I could just barely taste it. So, that lower end dose has no potential of ruining your beer. You should evaluate if a higher dosage meets your expectation by dosing in a glass of beer...before you dose a whole keg of beer.