morethanworts
Landlord.
This puzzles me:
When a brew finishes it's primary fermentation, I understand it is because the yeast has 'attenuated' and will not eat up any more fermentable sugars that may remain in the beer. Our Glossary defines attenuation as "[the] Extent to which yeast consumes fermentable sugars (converting them into alcohol and carbon dioxide)." So I infer that there will be fermentable sugars (as well as unfermentables) left in the beer.
Why, then, does the yeast suddenly get a new lease of life when we add priming sugar?
and
Why does it then still only eat up exactly the 80g, 100g per 23L or whatever that we've just added, rather than ever continuing (on its second wind) into the other residual fermentables, which would make a mockery of our careful priming allowance?
When a brew finishes it's primary fermentation, I understand it is because the yeast has 'attenuated' and will not eat up any more fermentable sugars that may remain in the beer. Our Glossary defines attenuation as "[the] Extent to which yeast consumes fermentable sugars (converting them into alcohol and carbon dioxide)." So I infer that there will be fermentable sugars (as well as unfermentables) left in the beer.
Why, then, does the yeast suddenly get a new lease of life when we add priming sugar?
and
Why does it then still only eat up exactly the 80g, 100g per 23L or whatever that we've just added, rather than ever continuing (on its second wind) into the other residual fermentables, which would make a mockery of our careful priming allowance?