this post was submitted on 20 Oct 2024
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Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider

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A community dedicated to homebrewing beer, mead, wine, cider and everything in between. If it ferments, bring it over here.

Share recipes, ideas, ask for feedback or just advice.


Some starting points for beginners:

Introduction to Beer Brewing

A basic mead primer

Quick and diry guide to fermenting fruit - cider and wine

Brewing software


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This one is going to be ACTIVE. Hope I can keep up.

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[โ€“] MuteDog@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

The salt definitely phased what was already there, it stopped yeast activity, that's why this ferment remains sweet. If yeast was active it'd eliminate all the sugar quickly.

[โ€“] phdepressed@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 month ago

Fermentation is organic substrate like glucose->other things, anaerobically. You don't get alcohol without sugar being converted to ethanol. The bacteria or yeast doing so can have different byproducts depending on substrate and the fermenting organism(s). Now the more complex sugars present in a fibrous fruit like pineapple does probably result in more sugar left than usual. Additionally pineapple acidity may also reduce the direct fermentation capability. If you do as with grains where you cook and macerate it and/or increase the pH some you'd probably be able to reduce the leftover sugar sweetness more while increasing the alcohol and sour notes.