djsereno91
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2015
- Messages
- 38
- Reaction score
- 9
Today was the long awaited day to open my Pliny clone that I made a month ago. I opened the first bottle and there was barely any carbonation! I did a couple things differently this time and I'm wondering if you guys have any thoughts.
With this batch, I upgraded (or at least I thought it was an upgrade) to some swingtop bottles. I was under the impression that swingtops were great, and they did save me a bunch of trouble when bottling. After I bottled, I read online about complaints that they weren't capable of containing the pressures from carbonation. Has this been the case for any of you?
Secondly, I cold crashed as low as a could (~45 degrees) and used gelatin finings to clear up the beer. This seemed to work great as well. However, I'm worried now that not enough yeast made it into the bottles to provide carbonation. Is there any truth to this?
Not sure what to do now. I plan on shaking up the bottles a bit to stir up the yeast and hopefully they'll kick it into gear. Maybe two weeks wasn't long enough in the bottles. Any other suggestions?
With this batch, I upgraded (or at least I thought it was an upgrade) to some swingtop bottles. I was under the impression that swingtops were great, and they did save me a bunch of trouble when bottling. After I bottled, I read online about complaints that they weren't capable of containing the pressures from carbonation. Has this been the case for any of you?
Secondly, I cold crashed as low as a could (~45 degrees) and used gelatin finings to clear up the beer. This seemed to work great as well. However, I'm worried now that not enough yeast made it into the bottles to provide carbonation. Is there any truth to this?
Not sure what to do now. I plan on shaking up the bottles a bit to stir up the yeast and hopefully they'll kick it into gear. Maybe two weeks wasn't long enough in the bottles. Any other suggestions?