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

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

A quick ?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

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

uwmgdman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 23, 2006
Messages
687
Reaction score
1
Location
Oregon, WI
What temperature do you all recommend the priming sugar water be cooled to before adding the beer to the bottling bucket and going ahead with bottling?
 
I'd say 'warm to the touch' too - i.e. below about 40C. When you syphon from your secondary on top of it it'll soon cool down and you won't kill yeast
 
I've done it fairly hot and had not problem with the carbonation. There are so many million yeasties and so much water that the small percentage of warm/hot water your adding shouldn't make a difference.

IGOR
 
I'm with Igor, I usually add the sugar and water solution after letting it cool for only a few minutes and haven't had any problems with carbonation.
 
My first couple brews I was really anal about cooling the priming solution to the same temp.

Then I realized, I'm racking 5 Gallons of 65 degree beer onto a cup or two of hot water. It will cool pretty quickly.

Since then, I cook the priming solution 1st, get everything else ready to bottle, and then just pour the solution in and go. I don't pay any attention to how hot or cold the solution is.

I haven't had any problems.
 
I have always used the following procedure: Take it off the stove, take a second to shut off the gas, walk across the room, dump it in the bottling bucket, futz around for a second starting the autosiphon. let the beer flow. Always works for me. I think the sugar water temperature is immaterial with five gallons of cool water coming in.
 
Back
Top