• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

7 Month Old beer creating tons of Co2

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

qgriffith

Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2009
Messages
5
Reaction score
0
I brewed a Honey Basil beer about 7 months ago. It aged for 2 months in the secondary before I kegged it. SInce then it has been sitting in the basement. I finally put it in the keg fridge 2 days ago. I went to sample it today to see how it was doing. I got a huge glass of foam so I blew off all the Co2 and let it rest a few hours. I do not have the gas line hooked up. When I went back to get a sample, I was still getting foam, and the keg had a ton of pressure built back up, with out the gas line hooked up. So I blew off all the gas again and took off the keg lid and foam starting pouring out of the keg. I have never seen this before, not sure what is going on. Anyone else seen this or know of a way I can salvage?
 
You had it overcarbed. Keep letting off the pressure and eventually it will be right.
 
Did you check the gravity before kegging? I had one do that once. The gravity was a little high, but stayed the same when I checked it a few days before kegging, and the day I kegged it, so I thought it was finished. It apparently started fermenting in the keg, and built up a lot of pressure. Took me over a week of purging the keg every day before it settled down.
 
Sadly I didn't check the gravity before kegging I figured after two months it would be all through. The yeast was Wyeast Belgium Sassion. I took it out of the fridge about 40 mins ago, and now that the beer has warmed up a bit in the keg, it isn't creating over flowing foam, and the Co2 creation has dropped dramatically. Not sure why the beer getting warmer is making it calm down.
 
When it gets warmer the co2 comes out of the liquid into the airspace at the top of the keg.
 
Ok thanks everyone for your replies, I will just keep on venting it every day till it calms down! Odd I didn't even add any priming sugar when I kegged it. I aged the beer for 2 months, kegged it and pumped 30 PSI into the keg, and let it sit for around 7 months in the basement which is around 65 degrees.
 
Back
Top