I'd say all down to personal preference.Surprisingly nobody had mentioned that you have to control BOTH temp and pressure to achieve your desired ‘fizz’
Quoting pressure is meaningless.
https://jollygoodbeer.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/JollyGoodBeer_PSI_Chart_for_CO2.pdf
Nope, you lost. Suck it up!!!!! Booooooooo!!!I'm sure both methods work equally well.
What I doI always end up with few litres over after kegging but just put the extra into bottles along with 1/2 teaspoon of sugar (from a teaspoon measure, not a teaspoon) through a funnel. It takes me a few minutes, I always get a consistent amount in and have never spilt a drop. I would think batch priming 25 litres for the sake of 4-5 bottles was much more of a faff.
I do add sugar to condition in the keg. I really dislike the fact that Cornies only hold five us gallons - just shy of 19 litres - when my brew length is over 25 litres with the Grainfather. It takes no more effort, and miniscule extra cost, to brew 25 litres than to brew 19 litres. So I brew 24 or 25 litre batches, 19 litres of which goes into a Corny, the rest goes into bottles. Therefore I batch prime the whole lot, rather than fiddling around trying to get tiny amounts of sugar into each bottle. Of course, I have to stand the Corny in a warm'ish place to condition for several days, but that's ok. I then add gas to the Corny as necessary when drawing beer from it.
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