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01-13-2013, 11:56 PM
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#1
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Extreme over carbonation
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Okay, I just had a bottle of home brewed S.S. Minnow Mils that was extremely over carbonated. I don't mean the carbonation took a long time to go down, this was a geyser and didn't stop. It just kept going and going. I had other bottles from the same batch that were just fine. Does anyone have any idea of what would cause this?
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01-14-2013, 12:15 AM
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#2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by msppilot
Okay, I just had a bottle of home brewed S.S. Minnow Mils that was extremely over carbonated. I don't mean the carbonation took a long time to go down, this was a geyser and didn't stop. It just kept going and going. I had other bottles from the same batch that were just fine. Does anyone have any idea of what would cause this?
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Sounds like you didn't fully mix the priming sugar. Hopefully you don't have more than one .
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01-14-2013, 12:20 AM
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#3
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I don't claim to be an expert on the matter, I only have a couple brews under my belt but my very first brew encountered similar problems.
I used swing top bottles and when I would swing the fasteners open the lid would explode off, it sounded like a gun going off. I took a bottle of it into my local home brew supplies store to get their opinion and they said it tasted fine but if its unusually carbonated or pressurized I probably didn't do a thorough job sanitizing.
My second batch I was very meticulous with sanitizing and it seemed to fix it. The beer tasted better too!
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01-14-2013, 01:11 AM
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#4
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Feldmann
I don't claim to be an expert on the matter, I only have a couple brews under my belt but my very first brew encountered similar problems.
I used swing top bottles and when I would swing the fasteners open the lid would explode off, it sounded like a gun going off. I took a bottle of it into my local home brew supplies store to get their opinion and they said it tasted fine but if its unusually carbonated or pressurized I probably didn't do a thorough job sanitizing.
My second batch I was very meticulous with sanitizing and it seemed to fix it. The beer tasted better too!
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Could happen but usually over carbonation is a result of over priming or not letting you beer finish. If you only have some bottles explode, you probably had some of your sugar not completely mix into solution.
I have had it happen. I even racked on top of my priming sugar mix and I had a few bottles over carb and few under carb. Now, I gently swirl it with a sanitized spoon on every batch and I haven't had it happen in 50 batches.
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Dive Often! Play Hard and Have a homeBrew!
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01-14-2013, 01:27 AM
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#5
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Gushers and bottle bombs are most likely caused by poor sanitation at bottling. You probably caught a bug in a bottle or two that fermented some normaly unfermentable sugers. It happens to the best of us.
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01-14-2013, 02:31 AM
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#6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ffd520
Gushers and bottle bombs are most likely caused by poor sanitation at bottling. You probably caught a bug in a bottle or two that fermented some normaly unfermentable sugers. It happens to the best of us.
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This. Be sure to really hit go at them with a bottle brush if you're using recycled bottles that weren't immediately rinsed and allowed to dry after pouring your beer. Also, I would toss any gusher bottles to be on the safe side.
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01-14-2013, 02:45 AM
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#7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by divrguy
Could happen but usually over carbonation is a result of over priming or not letting you beer finish. If you only have some bottles explode, you probably had some of your sugar not completely mix into solution.
I have had it happen. I even racked on top of my priming sugar mix and I had a few bottles over carb and few under carb. Now, I gently swirl it with a sanitized spoon on every batch and I haven't had it happen in 50 batches.
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When you say "not letting your beer finish" do you mean in the final stage when its in the bottles or in the fermenting stage?
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01-14-2013, 02:50 AM
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#8
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He means the fermenting stage. Not letting the bottles finish priming would lead to under carbonation
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01-14-2013, 07:11 PM
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#9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bamsdealer
He means the fermenting stage. Not letting the bottles finish priming would lead to under carbonation
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Yes I should have been more clear. Thanks.
When I hear someone had some bottles explode, some undercarb its usually sugar not mixed. When they only had one or two exploding bottles and all the rest correctly carbed, its sanitation.
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02-10-2013, 10:48 PM
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#10
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I'm starting to worry that my latest batch (easy extract hefeweizen) wasn't finished. I did the unthinkable and bottled without a steady reading. I rushed it because of everything I've read about hefe's being done fast and best when young.
Brewed on 1/16 with a starting gravity of 1.056. Took a reading of 1.015 on 1/27 and thought surely it was close if not done. Forgot to check again the following days, then took a reading of 1.012 on 2/1 while racking onto priming sugar. I figured there was no turning back at that point so I went ahead with bottling (4.2 oz corn sugar / 5 gallons). The sugar was already boiled and in the bottling bucket when I took the reading while racking to it or I would have dropped the amount.
4 days later I couldn't sleep thinking about it so I chilled one down and popped the top the next day. I was surprised at the amount of head on the pour however, it doesn't seem to have much retention and doesn't seem overcarbed on the tongue (no tingles). I immediately moved my case of 12oz bottles to a cooler in the basement and there it sits at 52 degrees. I've got another case of 16oz swing tops still trucking along in the closet at 64-66 degrees (cold house). I moved one to the fridge last night and just popped the top. Lots of pressure, 3 inches of head but again, not much retention and doesn't "feel" over carbed.
The good news, it's delicious. Are my worries justified or did I simply interfere with the process? I normally have a test bottle from every batch at the 1, 2 and then 3 week mark. Never have had this much activity so soon. I've also never used this much corn sugar because I have a terrible fear of bottle bombs.
Thoughts?
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