Tony Dyer
Active Member
I brew small batches (10 - 12 litres) of ale, full grain mash. I ferment down until the gravity more or less stalls, usually at about 1010 or a little above. I then rack the beer into a small polypin with 30 - 50g (depending on the strength of the brew) of priming sugar. I'm careful to exclude all (or as much as possible) air from the process and from the polypin once full. the polypin then inflates over the next day or two, presumably from the effects of secondary fermentation. I try to leave it for aboit 2 weeks before bottling.
So far so good. But sometimes the polypin begins to 'deflate' - I believe that is IS airtight, so I guess that the gas is reabsorbed into the beer? Then when I bottle it, once again I'm careful to exclude unnnecessary air, the result on drinking, after another week or whatever is often fairly flat.
How can I get some life into the final product without using a pressure based system? Should I prime at the bottling stage too? I did this once accidentally but the results were inconclusive.
Any suggestions gratefully received.
Ta
So far so good. But sometimes the polypin begins to 'deflate' - I believe that is IS airtight, so I guess that the gas is reabsorbed into the beer? Then when I bottle it, once again I'm careful to exclude unnnecessary air, the result on drinking, after another week or whatever is often fairly flat.
How can I get some life into the final product without using a pressure based system? Should I prime at the bottling stage too? I did this once accidentally but the results were inconclusive.
Any suggestions gratefully received.
Ta