ssashton
Regular.
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2019
- Messages
- 226
- Reaction score
- 71
Hi,
Recently my wife has been making kombucha and doing secondary fermentation in Wilko flip-top bottles. The first batch, primed with satsuma juice and ginger, came out well. Subsequent batches have not been very fizzy even when adding a few grams of table sugar.
Recently I had a bit of stout left in the fermenter after kegging, so I thought I'd stick it in a couple flip-top bottles with 1tsp sugar each and try bottle conditioning. However, after waiting 3 days (around 16-19C) it's barely fizzy.
I do cold crash and use finings in the fermenter before transfer, so the cold may delay priming, but that is not also the case with kombucha which is 25C when going in to secondary.
Could there be something I'm overlooking, or maybe these bottles are known to not hold much pressure? Anybody else had issues with these bottles?
Recently my wife has been making kombucha and doing secondary fermentation in Wilko flip-top bottles. The first batch, primed with satsuma juice and ginger, came out well. Subsequent batches have not been very fizzy even when adding a few grams of table sugar.
Recently I had a bit of stout left in the fermenter after kegging, so I thought I'd stick it in a couple flip-top bottles with 1tsp sugar each and try bottle conditioning. However, after waiting 3 days (around 16-19C) it's barely fizzy.
I do cold crash and use finings in the fermenter before transfer, so the cold may delay priming, but that is not also the case with kombucha which is 25C when going in to secondary.
Could there be something I'm overlooking, or maybe these bottles are known to not hold much pressure? Anybody else had issues with these bottles?