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Which mother for beer vinegar

PostPosted: Tue Jul 09, 2019 9:42 am
by SteveDass
Hey folks

Im looking to make some beer vinegar and all the retailers i am going to are giving me different answers... Im confused now! I also read Jonathan Sawyers book but even that just says 'mother' ...which one!

I need your HELP please.

For beer vinegar do i use a kombucha, apple cider,red wine vinegar mother or some other mother (scoby) an acetobacter that develops in fermenting alcohol and converts the ethanol into acetic acid.

I'll be very grateful for your help

Cheers
Steve

Re: Which mother for beer vinegar

PostPosted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 6:54 am
by Christopher Weeks
I think you can just glug in a bit of live vinegar from any source -- I'd use apple cider vinegar because that's what I have, and set it aside. You can aerate with a stream of bubbles to speed it up, but that's optional.

Re: Which mother for beer vinegar

PostPosted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 8:12 am
by SteveDass
Thanks for replying Christopher.

I have some of that unpasteurised Braggs stuff and will try that!

Do you think a cup full or 100ml in 3 pints of beer should be enough!

Cheers
Steve

Re: Which mother for beer vinegar

PostPosted: Wed Jul 10, 2019 11:56 am
by Christopher Weeks
I don't know for sure, but I suspect a teaspoon would be enough as long as you were patient.

Re: Which mother for beer vinegar

PostPosted: Mon Jan 27, 2020 11:24 pm
by kefir_14
Did you end up trying this out?
How was it?

Thanks!

Re: Which mother for beer vinegar

PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2020 1:50 pm
by RogerL
I've been fermenting vinegar for more than 30 years. You don't need a "mother". You want the liquid that comes with the mother.

Go to your nearest English pub and hopefully, there will be a bottle of malt vinegar on the table. These bottles are continually opened & closed and sometimes, left open. If there is floating material in the bottle, that is "mother", The liquid in the bottle, now contains the acetobacter bacteria. Take a bit of this liquid home and you now have a live working culture.

"Mother" is not recommended for the "static" process. It prevents efficient oxygen transfer to the liquid beneath it. I will be pleased to offer more of my process techniques. I teach the process.