Carbonation
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Carbonation
How do you 2nd ferment/carbonate your beer/cider
at bottling/barreling time.
I use 350ml boiling water and 150g brew sugar in
a plastic jug. Then add 10ml to each 500ml bottle
by syringe or pour all into barrel.
leave in warm(20c) place for a week. Then move to
colder place for 2 weeks, then drink
at bottling/barreling time.
I use 350ml boiling water and 150g brew sugar in
a plastic jug. Then add 10ml to each 500ml bottle
by syringe or pour all into barrel.
leave in warm(20c) place for a week. Then move to
colder place for 2 weeks, then drink
Rather have a full bottle in front of me
than a full frontal lobotomy
than a full frontal lobotomy
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gaza the instructor - Master Distiller

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- Location: sunny surrey
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Re: Carbonation
I rack off the beer for the final time into a bottling bucket.
Into a glass jug, add 4.5 grams of table sugar per 1 litre of beer.
Add the minimum amount of hot water to dissolve, leave it to cool.
Then slowly pour into the bucket whilst stirring gently.
Bottle with a wand and leave the bottles for 3 weeks to condition, then into the fridge 2 days before drinking.
For my mini kegs, I add 10 grams of sugar per keg and leave to condition the same as bottles.
Into a glass jug, add 4.5 grams of table sugar per 1 litre of beer.
Add the minimum amount of hot water to dissolve, leave it to cool.
Then slowly pour into the bucket whilst stirring gently.
Bottle with a wand and leave the bottles for 3 weeks to condition, then into the fridge 2 days before drinking.
For my mini kegs, I add 10 grams of sugar per keg and leave to condition the same as bottles.
Always give the hardest job to the laziest person because they will always find the easiest way to do it.
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vino-tinto - Senior Distiller

- Posts: 449
- Joined: Tue Oct 08, 2013 4:45 am
- Location: East of England
Re: Carbonation
Cheers VT, forgot to mention I to
rack to a bottling bucket with bottler.
So very similar will use on mini kegs
next time.
I use brewing sugar because it dissolves
easier.
rack to a bottling bucket with bottler.
So very similar will use on mini kegs
next time.
I use brewing sugar because it dissolves
easier.
Rather have a full bottle in front of me
than a full frontal lobotomy
than a full frontal lobotomy
-

gaza the instructor - Master Distiller

- Posts: 1595
- Joined: Fri Mar 11, 2016 10:02 pm
- Location: sunny surrey
- Stills: s.s&t500 copper
Re: Carbonation
I'm kind of lazy.
100g of white granulated into a barrel, rack the best part of a warm 25 litre brew onto it.
Leave somewhere warm for at least three days.
In theory it then goes somewhere cool for three weeks.
In practise I like warm bitter, the only beer that I brew these days, so it stays somewhere warm.
If I don't drink it too fast it can get quite a way down the barrel before I need to crack the top and let air in.
Then I drink fast!
I know, I'm a Heathen!
No apologies.
Robert.
100g of white granulated into a barrel, rack the best part of a warm 25 litre brew onto it.
Leave somewhere warm for at least three days.
In theory it then goes somewhere cool for three weeks.
In practise I like warm bitter, the only beer that I brew these days, so it stays somewhere warm.
If I don't drink it too fast it can get quite a way down the barrel before I need to crack the top and let air in.
Then I drink fast!
I know, I'm a Heathen!
No apologies.
Robert.
There is no ONE way.
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Easydrinker - Donated to StillSmart

- Posts: 5206
- Joined: Fri Jun 21, 2013 7:09 pm
- Location: The hills of lowland Scotland
- Stills: Smart & Silly
Re: Carbonation
I use a zevro sugar dispenser. Set at 1/2 tsp. Brilliant. Takes seconds.
email still_smart@yahoo.com and stay in touch. More details viewtopic.php?f=1&t=4947
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Mash - Master Distiller

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Re: Carbonation
Hey Mash, that's a nice little gadget, I had to google it to see what it was, never heard of them before.
Always give the hardest job to the laziest person because they will always find the easiest way to do it.
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vino-tinto - Senior Distiller

- Posts: 449
- Joined: Tue Oct 08, 2013 4:45 am
- Location: East of England
Re: Carbonation
Funny you ask!
The good folks at get er brewed didn't have the beer kit I ordered last time so substituted it with a dearer one and a gift packet of muntons carbonation drops, which I have never used before.
I hope to sterilise and bottle tomorrow and there are 80 drops for 40 pints, so it shouldn't be too far above my intellectual capacity.
The good folks at get er brewed didn't have the beer kit I ordered last time so substituted it with a dearer one and a gift packet of muntons carbonation drops, which I have never used before.
I hope to sterilise and bottle tomorrow and there are 80 drops for 40 pints, so it shouldn't be too far above my intellectual capacity.
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Curmudgeon - Master Distiller

- Posts: 521
- Joined: Tue Jul 26, 2016 10:23 pm
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Re: Carbonation
vino-tinto wrote:Hey Mash, that's a nice little gadget, I had to google it to see what it was, never heard of them before.
They seem to be a well kept secret. Run nicely. Beer bottling really is easy. I keep my bottles with a splash of spirit in them. So they don't need washing up either.
email still_smart@yahoo.com and stay in touch. More details viewtopic.php?f=1&t=4947
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Mash - Master Distiller

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- Joined: Wed Jan 21, 2015 4:42 pm
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