richaworth
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- Sep 20, 2020
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What's the cheapest way to force carb a couple of pints so I can take a proper sample of a beer I'm otherwise bottle conditioning.
Use a Carbonation cap. Beer in a 1 1/2 litre coke bottle. 40 psi and a good shake. Works best if the beer is cold crashed to 0C. Leave it in the fridge to settle and drink happily a couple of hours later.
Forgive the noob question, but what do I need to supply the 40psi? I have literally no experience with force carbing or CO2 systems, so detailed info is appreciated.
The cheapest way to do it is with some sort of mini regulator and some Co2 bulbs - you'll also need a grey gas disconnect to fit onto the carbonation cap.
To be honest, if you don't already have the equipment to force carb, I'm not sure it is worth it for the sake of sampling a couple of pints. I'm not sure what would be gained as you can't really make any adjustments to the beer by the time you're ready to sample it.
The problem here is that even carbonated very few beers taste decent fresh out the fermenter (Wheat beers tend to be good) but on the whole most beers I find benefit from a few weeks to condition.I'm thinking of going down this route but with a sodastream co2. Just for 1 or 2 of the 6x 1.5l bottles I make, the rest will be primed with sugar.
This is just for turnover purposes, get a few faster in the glass so to speak.
Are the carbination caps one-way flow? I.e. after carbing can I leave the cap on or should I replace with original cap?
I'm thinking one bottle quick carbed, 40psi and shake. The 2nd set and rest @ ?
My alternative solution is a 9l corny, but I cannot carb/store in the fridge.
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