Littletinca
New Member
Ive made 3 brews from kits, and so far everything has been just fine.
Today I bottled my 4th kit. A Coopers Dark Stout from a can. Fermentation was faster and more vigorous than the previous 3, and was over within 5 days. I left it for a day, then racked the stout into a second fv 3 days ago. Today I bottled it.
After the bottles were filled, I started to add a rounded spoonful of Wilco brand brewing sugar to each bottle, but immediately on adding the sugar to the bottlle, the stout frothed up and spilled out of the bottle.
I tried canesugar and the same thing happened.
I ended up tipping a glug out of each bottle into a sterilsed jug, putting the spoon of sugar in this, mixing it round, then very slowly adding it back to the bottle.
Consequently, the whole bottling process was a long, messy drawn out faff. My previous 3 brews have bottled fine, and have not fizzed up when ive added the sugar.
Ive tasted the unprimed stout and its not fizzy at all. It only fizzed up when the sugar was added.
Just to be safe, ive put all 40 pints in the shed in case they explode.
Can anyone offer any ideas as to why the stout might have fizzed up so much, and what I can do to prevent it happening in the future. Im fairly sure initial fermentation was over as the SG was the same as when I racked it.
Any advice greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Today I bottled my 4th kit. A Coopers Dark Stout from a can. Fermentation was faster and more vigorous than the previous 3, and was over within 5 days. I left it for a day, then racked the stout into a second fv 3 days ago. Today I bottled it.
After the bottles were filled, I started to add a rounded spoonful of Wilco brand brewing sugar to each bottle, but immediately on adding the sugar to the bottlle, the stout frothed up and spilled out of the bottle.
I tried canesugar and the same thing happened.
I ended up tipping a glug out of each bottle into a sterilsed jug, putting the spoon of sugar in this, mixing it round, then very slowly adding it back to the bottle.
Consequently, the whole bottling process was a long, messy drawn out faff. My previous 3 brews have bottled fine, and have not fizzed up when ive added the sugar.
Ive tasted the unprimed stout and its not fizzy at all. It only fizzed up when the sugar was added.
Just to be safe, ive put all 40 pints in the shed in case they explode.
Can anyone offer any ideas as to why the stout might have fizzed up so much, and what I can do to prevent it happening in the future. Im fairly sure initial fermentation was over as the SG was the same as when I racked it.
Any advice greatly appreciated.
Thanks