Beer is sour, has a pellicle on the surface, gushes on opening, or shows visible mould

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Bacterial or wild-yeast infection. Confirm with the symptoms above (not from a beer that tastes "off" in some other way), then assess whether the batch is recoverable.

Likely causes

CauseProcess articleIngredientNotes
Bottling or transfer equipment not fully cleaned and sanitisedSanitation — keeping the bugs outThis accounts for ~40% of infections we diagnose. Pay particular attention to bottling wand needles and racking cane internals.
Scratched or worn plastic fermenter harbouring micro-organismsSanitation — keeping the bugs outReplace plastic fermenters every 2-3 years; switch to glass or stainless if you can.
Open-air transfer in a contaminated environmentSanitation — keeping the bugs outGarage brew sheds are higher-risk than indoor kitchens. Cover all open vessels during transfer.
Damp or insufficiently-dry grain stored too longSanitation — keeping the bugs outMaris Otter Pale MaltStore grain dry and use within 12 months. Discard grain that smells musty.

Is it contaminated, or just unfamiliar?

A surprising fraction of suspected infections turn out to be normal yeast character the brewer didn’t recognise. Before assuming the worst:

  • Pellicle vs krausen. Krausen is the foamy yeast head during active fermentation. Pellicle is a thin, often patchy film that appears after primary, on the surface of static beer. Different things.
  • Sour vs phenolic. A genuinely sour beer tastes like lemon juice. A phenolic (clove/pepper) note from Belgian or wild yeast is not “sour” in the same way.
  • Gushing on opening. Can be infection (continued bacterial/wild yeast fermentation in the bottle) or simple over-priming. Compare carbonation across the same batch — if all bottles gush identically, it’s over-priming; if only some gush, infection.

Recovery

Light infection in the early stages can sometimes be saved by packaging quickly and chilling. Established pellicle + sourness — dump it. Save the equipment, not the batch.

Sanitise the fermenter ruthlessly

  1. Hot wash with PBW or oxiclean — 30 minutes’ soak minimum
  2. Inspect for scratches — the gold standard test is shining a torch across the inside surface in a darkened room; scratches become obvious. Scratched plastic should be replaced.
  3. 30-minute Star-San soak
  4. For confirmed-infected equipment, follow with a 10% bleach soak (1 hour), rinse exhaustively, then re-sanitise with Star-San

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