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I am led to believe that pressure fermenting can suppress esters and flavour you get from yeast, which is a disadvantage as far as I'm concerned...however I wondered if you did the first half of fermentation without any pressure then for the second half attached the spending valve and let the pressure rise would the yeast esters have already formed in the first part of the un-pressurised fermentation?
I'm considering this as I want the benefit of carbonation in the fermenter. I'm convinced bottle conditioning results in a nicer and smoother carbonation for some reason...maybe smaller bubble or something, and now I don't bottle I want that in my kegs. I could condition in the kegs but would prefer to carbonate in the fermenter, which I am hoping provides a similar result to bottle conditioning, then keg the carbonated beer while preserving any flavour contribution from the yeast.
Thanks.
I'm considering this as I want the benefit of carbonation in the fermenter. I'm convinced bottle conditioning results in a nicer and smoother carbonation for some reason...maybe smaller bubble or something, and now I don't bottle I want that in my kegs. I could condition in the kegs but would prefer to carbonate in the fermenter, which I am hoping provides a similar result to bottle conditioning, then keg the carbonated beer while preserving any flavour contribution from the yeast.
Thanks.