Guybrush Threepwood
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2019
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Looking for a bit of advice/reassurance.
A while ago I was planning on brewing an impy stout based on a Brooklyn Black Ops recipe. The method included leaving it in plastic bucket with bourbon soaked wood chips for 6 months after initial fermentation, then introduce champagne yeast for bottling.
Things got in the way and never got round to brewing it, but now planning on it being next brew but I'm not really fussed on the bourbon part and was thinking of just bottling after fermentation as normal and letting them bottle condition for 6 months.
The thing Im not sure of is whether the bottles will carb as normal, seeing as ABV is predicted at 10.2%.
Will the yeast be able to carb the beer in the bottles with priming sugar at this level of ABV? Likely using US-05 as my weapon of choice.
Might be a daft question but dont want to wait 6 months for a beer as flat as a witches proverbial.
Any advice much appreciated.
A while ago I was planning on brewing an impy stout based on a Brooklyn Black Ops recipe. The method included leaving it in plastic bucket with bourbon soaked wood chips for 6 months after initial fermentation, then introduce champagne yeast for bottling.
Things got in the way and never got round to brewing it, but now planning on it being next brew but I'm not really fussed on the bourbon part and was thinking of just bottling after fermentation as normal and letting them bottle condition for 6 months.
The thing Im not sure of is whether the bottles will carb as normal, seeing as ABV is predicted at 10.2%.
Will the yeast be able to carb the beer in the bottles with priming sugar at this level of ABV? Likely using US-05 as my weapon of choice.
Might be a daft question but dont want to wait 6 months for a beer as flat as a witches proverbial.
Any advice much appreciated.