Priming temps

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spykes1980

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Hey all,
Due to not being at my property much I only have the heating on when I get in at half 7 and turn it off at half 9 or so when the house is warm.

Therefore temps for carbonation/priming is at around 17/18 rather than the 20/22 recommended. Will it still work? not as much? not at all?
 
Those temps are fine, may take longer for the yeast to fully do it's thing as but it'll still do it
 
Ok thanks for replies.

Its just I used a teaspoons worth in each 500ml bottle and expected the bottle to be pretty hard like a bottle of coke would be pre opening due to carbonation pressure, but none of that going on they have been bottled 8 days now and will be going into the garage tomorrow to sit in the cold for as long as I can leave them.
 
with your temps I would think about leaving them in the house for a good 3 weeks in the bottle before moving them to chill out. Priming fermentation is not as quick or as active as the fermentation is in the fv. give it time....
 
spykes1980 said:
Ok thanks for replies.

Its just I used a teaspoons worth in each 500ml bottle and expected the bottle to be pretty hard like a bottle of coke would be pre opening due to carbonation pressure, but none of that going on they have been bottled 8 days now and will be going into the garage tomorrow to sit in the cold for as long as I can leave them.
Put a few of them in the oven and warm them up to around 23C, let the warmth soak right through, then put them back with the rest and put a cover on them. The warm up should get the yeast active and once going they will keep themselves and the others warm, they will probably all go hard within a couple of days.
 

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