Hi all,
I tried priming a pilsner a while ago, which stated half a teaspoon of sugar per bottle or 85g for a pressure barrel.
I took the boiled sugar solution route for bottling, and presumed 85g would do the trick, as it would for the barrel. However, 2 weeks at 20° (no joy) and then 3 weeks at 23° still led to a sugary, flat solution. Pretty sure a good 5 weeks would prime it, but not the case.
Half a teaspoon per bottle is much less than 85g sugar, but I'm wondering if i should have actually added more?
Doesn't seem to be any concrete instructions for the "safer" solution method, and i find myself in a similar spot with woodefordes wherry now.
TIA, Alex
I tried priming a pilsner a while ago, which stated half a teaspoon of sugar per bottle or 85g for a pressure barrel.
I took the boiled sugar solution route for bottling, and presumed 85g would do the trick, as it would for the barrel. However, 2 weeks at 20° (no joy) and then 3 weeks at 23° still led to a sugary, flat solution. Pretty sure a good 5 weeks would prime it, but not the case.
Half a teaspoon per bottle is much less than 85g sugar, but I'm wondering if i should have actually added more?
Doesn't seem to be any concrete instructions for the "safer" solution method, and i find myself in a similar spot with woodefordes wherry now.
TIA, Alex