MDB
Well-Known Member
From reading alot on carb posts, I can see a relative consensus that you should carb in bottles for a minimum of 3 weeks at 70 degrees, and higher gravoty beers take perhaps alot longer. I carbed my first two batches so far for longer than that (an amber ale for 5 weeks and a dry irish stout for 4 weeks) but at about 60 degrees ambient temp in my cellar. Neither was terribly high gravioty (I forget at the moment but under 1.070) Not by design, but by necessity of space (and so sh!t luck I guess), I have Belgian dark ale carbing at 70 degrees inmy heated home office.
Question: my two batches carbing at 60 degrees are a little under carbed for my tastes -- would they benefit from moving them to the 70 degree space now, after sitting at 60 for a month plus? For future reference, (and by necesity of space) can I get good carbonation in the 60 degree with longer time periods than the recomended 3 weeks? Or is there something magic about the extra 10 degrees?
Thanks!
Question: my two batches carbing at 60 degrees are a little under carbed for my tastes -- would they benefit from moving them to the 70 degree space now, after sitting at 60 for a month plus? For future reference, (and by necesity of space) can I get good carbonation in the 60 degree with longer time periods than the recomended 3 weeks? Or is there something magic about the extra 10 degrees?
Thanks!