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

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Bottle Conditioning Temp

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

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

DonGavlar

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 7, 2017
Messages
196
Reaction score
68
Hi all,

So yesterday I bottled up my first ever 5 gal batch after being in the primary for 3 weeks.

I've boxed the bottles up and and stored them in a spare room (the only room that's got space for boxes of beer that isn't too cold).

I brew my beer in a small cupboard that I can maintain an ambient temp of around 67/68F however there isn't room in there for my boxes of bottles (I'm currently in the process of converting a fridge for my fermenter). The only room that's viable for my bottles of beer fluctuates from 67-73F depending on how cold it is outside and how high the heating is on. I've been tampering with how wide the window is open/ how high the radiator in that room is on but im still getting around 72 in that room and I assume it goes down to around 68 at night.

Are these temp fluctuations going to affect my beer and is the higher temps going to cause off flavours and the lower temps going to slow carbonation? I read revvys post and some others and I got that the general consensus is to leave them 3 weeks+ at 70. I'm just worried that the higher temps im getting and the lowers temps im getting are going to affect the quality of my beers.

I'm sure you get these kind of posts all the time so I'm sorry if thats the case but I couldn't find any thing really explaining what temp ranges are ok whilst bottled and what the outcome will be.

Thanks all
 
The fluctuating temperature during bottle conditioning will not adversely affect your beer. The yeast is just using the priming sugar to produce CO2. Much different than when the yeast is first pitched into the wort when fluctuating temperatures can produce unwanted esters.

Temperatures from 68° to 75°F are good for bottle conditioning. May take an additional few days to carbonate at the low end of this range but the bottles will carbonate. Keeping the bottles away from a direct heat source is advisable though to not shorten the shelf life.
 
The fluctuating temperature during bottle conditioning will not adversely affect your beer. The yeast is just using the priming sugar to produce CO2. Much different than when the yeast is first pitched into the wort when fluctuating temperatures can produce unwanted esters.

Temperatures from 68° to 75°F are good for bottle conditioning. May take an additional few days to carbonate at the low end of this range but the bottles will carbonate. Keeping the bottles away from a direct heat source is advisable though to not shorten the shelf life.

Great, Thanks.

It's only a 4% beer so I'll leave it alone for the next 3 weeks then chill and see how it is.

My boxes of beer are about a meter or so away from the radiator, I've got the radiator set quite low to maintain a slightly lower ambient temp, If i hover my hand on the side of the boxes that are facing the radiator I can't feel any heat from the radiator so should be fine, right?
 
That should be good. Chill one bottle for two days after two weeks to check progress and a first taste. Chilling for two days will settle any sediments suspended from moving the bottles. Do a smooth pour to keep any sediment and excess yeast at the bottom of the bottle.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top