GhostShip
Junior Member
Up to now, I’ve always batch primed for secondary fermentation - dissolved the sugar in boiling water in the barrel, then siphoned the beer from the FV into the barrel and then from the barrel into bottles.
I’ve never really thought about it too much before, but it’s been the case that some bottles let off a real ‘hiss’ when opened, while others are much more tame. I’ve therefore noticed when drinking that some bottles have carbonated better than others.
I recently ordered Mangrove Jack’s Pink Grapefruit IPA and as part of the offer, got some carbonation drops which I’d never used before. I put one drop into each 500ml bottle and put them into the brew fridge to secondary ferment. When I took them out a month later (2 weeks at warm and 2 at cold), I was immediately struck by the firmness of every bottle. The consistency was amazing.
It’s made me think that I’ll stop batch priming and add sugar (carbonation drops are just an expensive way of doing it) to each bottle from now on. It stands to reason that it will result in more consistent carbonation, rather than relying on a perfect mix in the barrel (which is probably never going to happen).
Anyone else had a similar experience?
P.S. The Pink Grapefruit IPA is in the shed and I haven’t tried it yet so can’t comment on the quality of the beer!
I’ve never really thought about it too much before, but it’s been the case that some bottles let off a real ‘hiss’ when opened, while others are much more tame. I’ve therefore noticed when drinking that some bottles have carbonated better than others.
I recently ordered Mangrove Jack’s Pink Grapefruit IPA and as part of the offer, got some carbonation drops which I’d never used before. I put one drop into each 500ml bottle and put them into the brew fridge to secondary ferment. When I took them out a month later (2 weeks at warm and 2 at cold), I was immediately struck by the firmness of every bottle. The consistency was amazing.
It’s made me think that I’ll stop batch priming and add sugar (carbonation drops are just an expensive way of doing it) to each bottle from now on. It stands to reason that it will result in more consistent carbonation, rather than relying on a perfect mix in the barrel (which is probably never going to happen).
Anyone else had a similar experience?
P.S. The Pink Grapefruit IPA is in the shed and I haven’t tried it yet so can’t comment on the quality of the beer!