josephenoch
Junior
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2021
- Messages
- 12
- Reaction score
- 11
I started making my second wine this year and this time around I decided to let it turn to vinegar. I do it old school style with old oak barrels and I make it all by hand. Today on December 26 while stirring my mash, I discovered a dead mouse in one of my barrels. It was dead. It was not decomposed or decomposing. It was probably in the liquid and mash for no longer than a week or two, maybe three but I don't think so. There is about 25 gallons of liquid in this barrel and I do not want to throw it out.
What will this do to my juice?
What would you do?
Here is what goes through my head...
It sounds kind of gross at first but hear me out...
Will the dead mouse contaminate my second wine vinegar?
Will the fermentation process and acid in the alcohol turning to vinegar be enough to kill any bacteria the dead mouse may have possibly left in my liquid?
There are worms in the wild mushrooms I eat all the time and it doesn't seem to harm me.
People grow vegetables in dirt and worm crap.
There have been years where there have been many hundreds if not thousands of fruit flies that have landed on my mash and laid eggs in the mash and that has never harmed anyone in my family or friends from drinking that wine.
I have even made wine with moldy grapes and that has never harmed anyone who drank it.
Is the mouse simply just pickled?
People ferment meat all the time.
How is this any different?
People in other countries eat rats. How is this any different?
What harm is a drop of mouse poo or pee after it's pressed out when the ratio to liquid is so minimal?
25 gallons to a few drops?
Does this happen in major commercial wine distribution processes?
It's not like it's arsenic or amatoxins in deadly wild mushrooms.
Has anyone read "The Immortality Key?"
Apparently according to the book, there have been trace elements of residue from toxic plants and lizard bones found in old containers people used to ferment their wines in to give it more a "kick."
Are we doing things all wrong by sterilizing too much?
Anyone want to come over any have a glass of this stuff with me when it's ready?
Seriously, all feedback is welcome on this.
What will this do to my juice?
What would you do?
Here is what goes through my head...
It sounds kind of gross at first but hear me out...
Will the dead mouse contaminate my second wine vinegar?
Will the fermentation process and acid in the alcohol turning to vinegar be enough to kill any bacteria the dead mouse may have possibly left in my liquid?
There are worms in the wild mushrooms I eat all the time and it doesn't seem to harm me.
People grow vegetables in dirt and worm crap.
There have been years where there have been many hundreds if not thousands of fruit flies that have landed on my mash and laid eggs in the mash and that has never harmed anyone in my family or friends from drinking that wine.
I have even made wine with moldy grapes and that has never harmed anyone who drank it.
Is the mouse simply just pickled?
People ferment meat all the time.
How is this any different?
People in other countries eat rats. How is this any different?
What harm is a drop of mouse poo or pee after it's pressed out when the ratio to liquid is so minimal?
25 gallons to a few drops?
Does this happen in major commercial wine distribution processes?
It's not like it's arsenic or amatoxins in deadly wild mushrooms.
Has anyone read "The Immortality Key?"
Apparently according to the book, there have been trace elements of residue from toxic plants and lizard bones found in old containers people used to ferment their wines in to give it more a "kick."
Are we doing things all wrong by sterilizing too much?
Anyone want to come over any have a glass of this stuff with me when it's ready?
Seriously, all feedback is welcome on this.