New_to_Brew
Active Member
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2019
- Messages
- 27
- Reaction score
- 13
Hi all,
I tried a small bottle of my leffe clone last night and when I opened it it gushed out everywhere and threw up all the yeast on the bottom, whatever foam was left tasted lovely once settled though. I moved the other bottles into my spare room, went to bed and at 5am I heard a loud bang and one of my 750ml leffe clone bottles of the same batch had exploded think disturbing them brought on the inevitable
I googled it and seems like there's lot of reasons, too much priming sugar (I doubt that as I measured it out, 6g per litre), didn't mix the dissolved sugar enough, wild yeast infection, bottles aren't clean enough or the obvious which is primary fermentation hadn't finished (doubt that too, FG was 1.008)
These are flip top bottles so what I've done is quickly pop the caps (some started doing the same as my small bottle I tried, violently throwing up yeast and bubbles from the bottom) then resealed them, covered with a towel and put in the sink.
I'm thinking that should've released some pressure, Im going to drink some this weekend and the rest wait another week and hope it's still carbonated but not dangerous.
What do you guys think? Have I done the right thing?
BTW I thought I should mention the yeast I've used is mangrove jacks bavarian wheat yeast, M20. Attenuation medium and flocculation low, will this yeast cause anything like this to happen? The flip top bottles do seem thin too but managed my previous belgian ale just fine
I tried a small bottle of my leffe clone last night and when I opened it it gushed out everywhere and threw up all the yeast on the bottom, whatever foam was left tasted lovely once settled though. I moved the other bottles into my spare room, went to bed and at 5am I heard a loud bang and one of my 750ml leffe clone bottles of the same batch had exploded think disturbing them brought on the inevitable
I googled it and seems like there's lot of reasons, too much priming sugar (I doubt that as I measured it out, 6g per litre), didn't mix the dissolved sugar enough, wild yeast infection, bottles aren't clean enough or the obvious which is primary fermentation hadn't finished (doubt that too, FG was 1.008)
These are flip top bottles so what I've done is quickly pop the caps (some started doing the same as my small bottle I tried, violently throwing up yeast and bubbles from the bottom) then resealed them, covered with a towel and put in the sink.
I'm thinking that should've released some pressure, Im going to drink some this weekend and the rest wait another week and hope it's still carbonated but not dangerous.
What do you guys think? Have I done the right thing?
BTW I thought I should mention the yeast I've used is mangrove jacks bavarian wheat yeast, M20. Attenuation medium and flocculation low, will this yeast cause anything like this to happen? The flip top bottles do seem thin too but managed my previous belgian ale just fine