Hi,
I've been back brewing for about 2 years now, always all grain. I'm a very diligent brewer and I always get a good mash extraction and good clean fermentations.
I rack to a pressure barrel and the beer comes out great, but as soon as I start to bottle... things go wrong.
I've tried 1/2 teaspoon per 500ml bottle, sugar tabs and batch priming and EVERY time I'm left with bottle bombs. The beer still tastes good, there's no infection there, but I'm left with maybe 200mls out of a 500ml bottle.
Any advice? My brewing book, Graham Wheeler, suggests that a properly brewed beer doesn't need priming and will come into condition on it's own. Does anyone do this? Just leave the beer in bottle for several months and let it condition itself?
I tend to brew dark beers suitable for aging' stouts, porters, quadrupels etc - though planning an IPA soon.
HELP PLEASE!
J
I've been back brewing for about 2 years now, always all grain. I'm a very diligent brewer and I always get a good mash extraction and good clean fermentations.
I rack to a pressure barrel and the beer comes out great, but as soon as I start to bottle... things go wrong.
I've tried 1/2 teaspoon per 500ml bottle, sugar tabs and batch priming and EVERY time I'm left with bottle bombs. The beer still tastes good, there's no infection there, but I'm left with maybe 200mls out of a 500ml bottle.
Any advice? My brewing book, Graham Wheeler, suggests that a properly brewed beer doesn't need priming and will come into condition on it's own. Does anyone do this? Just leave the beer in bottle for several months and let it condition itself?
I tend to brew dark beers suitable for aging' stouts, porters, quadrupels etc - though planning an IPA soon.
HELP PLEASE!
J