I tried googling this and searching on the forum but couldn't find a clear answer.....
Roughly following the 2+2+2 rule I'm allowing 3 weeks for fermentation, then (after bottling) 2 weeks for carbonation and a further 2 weeks for conditioning.
- I'm fermenting in the primary FV (pale ales, bitters, IPAs etc.) around 19-21degC.
- Then I'm storing the bottles for 4 weeks at the same temp (so the yeast continues to work on the priming sugar) to allow time for carbonation and conditioning.
- After that I just store the bottles somewhere cool (i.e. the garage) until whenever I'm ready to drink them
Is that right (well, right enough ) or should I be moving the bottles somewhere cool after 2 weeks, i.e. carbonate at room temp, but condition somewhere cool?
Bonus question - while googling I saw some suggestion that I should move the FV somewhere cool a few days before bottling to make more of the yeast etc drop out of suspension. Is this especially worthwhile, does it make much difference to flavour and/or clarity?
Cheers,
Matt
Roughly following the 2+2+2 rule I'm allowing 3 weeks for fermentation, then (after bottling) 2 weeks for carbonation and a further 2 weeks for conditioning.
- I'm fermenting in the primary FV (pale ales, bitters, IPAs etc.) around 19-21degC.
- Then I'm storing the bottles for 4 weeks at the same temp (so the yeast continues to work on the priming sugar) to allow time for carbonation and conditioning.
- After that I just store the bottles somewhere cool (i.e. the garage) until whenever I'm ready to drink them
Is that right (well, right enough ) or should I be moving the bottles somewhere cool after 2 weeks, i.e. carbonate at room temp, but condition somewhere cool?
Bonus question - while googling I saw some suggestion that I should move the FV somewhere cool a few days before bottling to make more of the yeast etc drop out of suspension. Is this especially worthwhile, does it make much difference to flavour and/or clarity?
Cheers,
Matt