MarkBowie
Regular.
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2016
- Messages
- 408
- Reaction score
- 139
Hello everyone,
Due to a messed up house move my brewing equipment has been in storage since March so am just looking on in envy at everyone's brew write ups. So I went to where my beer is being stored (at my brothers) and persuaded him to move everything so I could get to some I had brewed last November time.
It had cleared up nicely in the bottle, I chilled it and opened it to pour. However, it went off like a rocket at I have had 3 do the same. They didn't taste bad at all, just obviously when they go off all the yeast and sediment mixes in. After nearly a year and tasting ok I'm assuming I can rule out infection and can pretty much bank on it being a newby bottling error with the sugar.
I'm hoping to be in the new house and therefore able to get brew shed up and running. What's the best thing for me to do with (what I think is) 30 something bottles of overprimed beer? I do have pressure barrels available.
Due to a messed up house move my brewing equipment has been in storage since March so am just looking on in envy at everyone's brew write ups. So I went to where my beer is being stored (at my brothers) and persuaded him to move everything so I could get to some I had brewed last November time.
It had cleared up nicely in the bottle, I chilled it and opened it to pour. However, it went off like a rocket at I have had 3 do the same. They didn't taste bad at all, just obviously when they go off all the yeast and sediment mixes in. After nearly a year and tasting ok I'm assuming I can rule out infection and can pretty much bank on it being a newby bottling error with the sugar.
I'm hoping to be in the new house and therefore able to get brew shed up and running. What's the best thing for me to do with (what I think is) 30 something bottles of overprimed beer? I do have pressure barrels available.