brewinhard wrote:White labs lacto strain DOES produce ethanol, CO2, and lactic acid, while the WY version only produces CO2 and lactic acid (no ethanol).

patterns wrote: Perhaps from the tiny grain bill in the big mash tun?
BN Army // 13th Mountain Division 

patterns wrote:I added the german ale yeast on sunday, 7 days after pitching the lacto, and the gravity had dropped further than I had expected. It went from 1.030 to 1.016 in the week with just the lacto. I'm not sure how far the saccro is going to be able to take it.
So now with just my hydrometer what is the best way to figure out ABV? Maybe say the lacto eats another point before the ale yeast slows it down so then it's just the same ol calc assuming the ale yeast going from 1.015 s.g. to what ever my f.g. is?
This ought to be quite the session beer.


patterns wrote:Just as an update I brewed on Sunday and hit my 1.030 SG (with a little help from DME, this was the lowest my efficiency has ever been. Perhaps from the tiny grain bill in the big mash tun?). I pitched the lacto (WY 5335) at 10 mil cells/ml and finally got around to taking another gravity reading 96 hours later. It is now at 1.026. I've got my wife borrowing some ph test strips from her work so I can measure the ph later tonight as well.
It looks like there should be sugars left after a week for the German Ale yeast (WY 1007) to munch on.
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