Hoppydays
New Member
Maybe this has been asked before but I haven’t found a thread on it yet. About 12 days ago I bottled my Continental Saison (my second ever home-brew) and stored them in my cupboard at about room temp or just below. Today I moved them into the conservatory to keep cooler for about 3 weeks as per the instructions I’d been given. However my conservatory isn’t insulated at all and gets really cold at night at the moment and obviously if the suns out can get fairly warm during the day.
I understand that the first week or so of bottle conditioning should be warmer for the yeast to consume the priming sugars (160g sugar drops in my case), but how important is it to age at a certain temperature?
Is this fluctuating temperature going to seriously affect my beer or am I over thinking it??
cheers,
Hoppy
I understand that the first week or so of bottle conditioning should be warmer for the yeast to consume the priming sugars (160g sugar drops in my case), but how important is it to age at a certain temperature?
Is this fluctuating temperature going to seriously affect my beer or am I over thinking it??
cheers,
Hoppy