Anyone know this? I used the search tool to find the answer but came up empty handed. I don't want to bottle and risk over/under carbonating until someone with more experience than me can advise...
Thanks.:)
So am I reading this graph properly?
its currently 51.8F down there... so if I draw a straight line from say 52F I need 3.6 fluid Ounces of Priming sugar?
3.60 fluid Ounces = 0.45 Cups...so basically half a cup of sugar? That can't be right
This is what I pulled in Beersmith
But that is...
Hey man... Thanks...
Drew 2 samples, 1 from the continental pilsner and one from the blonde lager...
Both tasted FANTASTIC!!! A little more carbonation and a tad bit colder and I swear you could just drink it now! :ban:
What I have noticed from this beer and from my brown ale is that...
Cool, I will sample both and start warming up the room.
Should I just leave the continental pilsner in there anyways so it warms at the same rate as the Blonde?
Thanks for the follow-up... :)
That's exactly what I suggested, but he went with the LHBS' advice.
Once this batch is out of there, we're definitely going to be adding the hole.
Thanks for the reassurance on the brew everyone.
So it seems I should be good to begin raising the temperature to around 60F... What do...
Ok, so one batch of Lager (Blonde Lager) has been sitting in primary for 8 days, the other Lager (A Continental Pislner) has been in primary for 9 days. The air lock on the pislner had been bubbling for a good 5 days or so. The fermenting bucket, which belongs to a friend, for the Blonde did not...
Thanks. I'm thinking of using brown sugar for my brown ale as per a sugestion by someone here but I take it its the same process. Just want to make sure I get a nice, even mix when I add the syrup in...
Awesome.
So after you boil the priming sugar, do you need it to cool down to a certain range before adding it to your bottling bucket/beer?
Does it mix better at certain temps?