drakub
Well-Known Member
Does anyone know how long these have to sit in a bottle to be ready?
the carbonation will not come down with time. only way it will come down is to release it. chill the bottles, gently transfer to counter, pry off cap just enough to let the pressure escape (a long slow hiss would be ideal), once all the pressure is gone rip of the cap and re-cap with a new cap. do not re-use the old one as it is now bent and won't hold pressure.So there is an issue with my banana beers. They were placed in bottles over 3 weeks ago and while trying two of them they are way over carbonated ... actually to a point of exploding when opened. Will this carbonation come down with time or did i do something wrong? I did use dark brown sugar when bottling rather then light brown sugar. Everything else was done according to the recipe.
Question: Why did you freeze the bananas?
Banana is no longer floating on the surface.
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wow! this looks like a mead i vinted with 20 lbs of fresh mangos puree.
That must have been an expensive mead...20lbs of mango puree!!
So there is an issue with my banana beers. They were placed in bottles over 3 weeks ago and while trying two of them they are way over carbonated ... actually to a point of exploding when opened. Will this carbonation come down with time or did i do something wrong? I did use dark brown sugar when bottling rather then light brown sugar. Everything else was done according to the recipe.
I'll admit I haven't read through all 30 pages of this thread.
I am curious as to whether anybody has foregone the addition of rum, and what this would taste like in comparison to the original recipe?
Is the rum really a critical component of this recipe? What does it lend which cannot be achieved with malts/banana?
Any suggestions on how to alter the recipe/compensate for the omission of rum?