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Too much head?

Discussion in 'Beginners Beer Brewing Forum' started by Buffalobrewer89, Aug 23, 2017.

 

  1. #1
    Buffalobrewer89

    Member

    Posted Aug 23, 2017
    Don't burn me at the stake! I know this will be blasphemy but my honey hefewizen and caribou slobber have major heads. To the point where I pour maybe an inch into the glass and have to wait forever for the head to dicipate. This normal or did I do something wrong during brewing. Also is there a way to lighten the head, minus sticking my finger in the glass. (I don't want it completely gone, just maybe half )
     
  2. #2
    Ozarks_Mountain_Brew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 23, 2017
    you probably force carbed it, mine dies that every time I force carb, so just lower your pressure to 3 psi
     
  3. #3
    flars

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2017
    Excessive foaming during the pour can be caused by the fermentation finishing in the bottle.
     
  4. #4
    Wildcat_Brewing

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2017
    Sounds over carbed, let it warm up a little and pull the release a few times to let out some of the carbonation that comes out of solution. It happens to me when I try to carb it to quick but is usually better than waiting.
     
  5. #5
    Buffalobrewer89

    Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2017
    My beer is directly from bottles. As for "said no one ever" I prefer drinking beer, not foam with 10% beer which was why I asked the question.
     
  6. #6
    RM-MN

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Aug 24, 2017
    Yes your beer is probably over carbonated. It may not be. There isn't sufficient information to tell.

    If you bottle beer before it has completed fermentation and reached its final gravity it will continue to ferment in the bottle. When you add priming sugar that will also ferment in the bottle. Some kits give you a packet of sugar for priming that can be a little more than necessary. Add that to beer that wasn't quite done fermenting and you get major over carbonation and you beer foams too much. Always use your hydrometer to verify that the beer is done fermenting by taking at least 2 reading a couple days apart. If they don't match, don't bottle but wait a few more days and sample again.

    It's also possible that your beer is perfectly carbonated but you are opening the bottles too soon and there is still suspended yeast or hop particles. These tiny particles will be nucleation points that allow the CO2 to come out of suspension too fast giving you lots of foam. The recommended time to wait from bottling is 3 weeks. This allows these particles to settle out.
     
    AJinJacksonville likes this.
  7. #7
    Buffalobrewer89

    Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2017
    Ahh okay. Thanks for the information
     
  8. #8
    brewcat

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2017
    My guess would be too much priming sugar. When I bottle carb I usually use under 4 oz. Most kits send at least 5 oz if not more. Next time use a priming sugar calculator.
     
  9. #9
    jalc6927

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Aug 26, 2017
    Never
     
    helibrewer likes this.
  10. #10
    AJinJacksonville

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 26, 2017
    I've had that happen a couple of times...most recently when I had to use table sugar in place of corn sugar. I added (what I thought) was 4.5 oz of table sugar...which ended up being a little bit too much. Not a terribly high head...but more than I wanted for sure.

    I brewed the same batch again and cut back on the table sugar by a bit over .5 oz...and it is just right now.
     
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