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Mr Beer Priming sugar!!
Ok so this is the first batch of beer i have made and im using the Mr Beer brew setup Because this is just a starting hobby. Well my first fermentation is coming to an end and i was wondering instead of adding sugar to each bottle then filling the bottle, how mush sugar would i add to the entire batch and how would i go by doing this. I know i might sound dumb but its just a question i was thinking of. Thanks guys!!! :D
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Cool, sounds good to me, i was just wondering if there were other ways. thanks for the help!
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About 3/4 cup corn sugar (dextrose) to 5 gallons of beer. A little more or less won't hurt it.
The "Prohibition Method" (what Papazian calls it) of priming each bottle individually has two small problems associated with it. First, it makes sanitation more difficult to control. Second, uneven amounts of sugar in each bottle, potentially leading to under or over carbonation. If you have two carboys (or pails), when it's time for bottling you can pour your sugar solution (your dextrose boiled in water) into the empty one and then siphon the beer into it. Or you can add the sugar directly to the entire batch if you take care not to stir up the sediment at the bottom (I do it this way when I'm feeling lazy). Know I'm a bit late and its a moot point, but perhaps this may be of help in later batches. |
bottle prime it
mr beer has no secondary, or even a bottling bucket, you pour right from the spigot on the fermenter. It's shaped such that the trub will settle at the bottom and stay out of your beer; if you stir in priming sugar, you'll pull the trub back into suspension and you'll have to wait until it settles, during which time your yeast will go to work on the priming sugar. If you're not sure about adding sugar to each bottle (the difference between bottles and the contamination risk are valid concerns), check out a product called primetabs
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For this problem I would recommend Coopers Carbination Drops (or the primetabs as our freind Cheezus mentioned). Each piece is enough priming sugar for a 12 oz beer and you use 2 pieces for 22 oz bottles. This will eliminate the dosing problems as well as ensure you do not disturb your beer prior to bottling. These should be available online if you do not have a local homebrew shop. Eventualy as you realize that homebrewing is the only way to go, you will likely want to upgrade your brewery to include 2 glass carboys and 1 bottling bucket. Then you can prime your whole 5 gallon batch with 3/4 cups dextrose or 1 cup DME (dried malt extract) as well as rack (transfer) your beer to a secondary fermentor to age and clarify. And the glass caboys are nice because you can observe the fermentation process.
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(im not trying to come off as an ass to mr beer users) |
While using the Mr Beer brewing equipment I get around the priming issue by making a solution of equal parts corn sugar and water, boiling and cooling it and then adding to the bottles. 12 oz bottles 3/4 tsp corn sugar and 3/4 tsp water per bottle. 16 oz bottles 1 tsp corn sugar and 1 tsp water per bottle. When adding the solution, add 3/4 tsp solution per 12 oz bottle and 1 tsp solution per 16 oz bottle. If there is solution left, add another 1/4 or 1/2 tsp per bottle. (Don't cap till all the solution is equally used) I've had good results with this method.
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