Velnerj
Simul justus et potator
I've got a question regarding how much pressure (or volumes of CO2)a bottle can hold before it releases a gushing foamy river of regret across the kitchen counter and down the drain.
What are your experiences when bottling high pressure styles like hefes, triples, bruit IPA etc.? Have you found that a certain calculated volume maximises the chance to create gushers?
I understand that gushers often form from miscalculated priming, under attenuated beer, infections etc. But I'm not necessarily talking about these cases. I'm more concerned with the situation when you've hit true final gravity, you have pristine sanitation, healthy beer and calculated properly for the volume CO2 and you've reached a limited that creates gushing bottles of beer.
Here are some questions I'm pondering:
1) what volume of CO2 can you hit just before you're likely to have gushers? For example, 4.0 is OK but 4.3 often times is too much.
2) Does bottle size and shape affect the likelihood of gushers happening? Does the type of bottle affect it (crown capped, grolsch, PET etc)?
3) Does the amount of time affect it? Conditioning time (stored at room temperature) and chill time (stored in the fridge).
4) How does agitation affect it? Can I bring (thereby causing sediment to stir etc.) my high volume bottles to other people's houses without being embarrassed?
5) Are different strains of yeast more susceptible/averse to gushers?
I've had varying degrees of success and failure with gushers, and though I've never ruled out infection, I'd like to know if there's a limit to how much I am calculating and planning my CO2 volumes. And if there are some best practices (other than the obvious sanitation, properly mixed and calculated sugar etc.)
I'd appreciate hearing your experiences.
Thanks!
What are your experiences when bottling high pressure styles like hefes, triples, bruit IPA etc.? Have you found that a certain calculated volume maximises the chance to create gushers?
I understand that gushers often form from miscalculated priming, under attenuated beer, infections etc. But I'm not necessarily talking about these cases. I'm more concerned with the situation when you've hit true final gravity, you have pristine sanitation, healthy beer and calculated properly for the volume CO2 and you've reached a limited that creates gushing bottles of beer.
Here are some questions I'm pondering:
1) what volume of CO2 can you hit just before you're likely to have gushers? For example, 4.0 is OK but 4.3 often times is too much.
2) Does bottle size and shape affect the likelihood of gushers happening? Does the type of bottle affect it (crown capped, grolsch, PET etc)?
3) Does the amount of time affect it? Conditioning time (stored at room temperature) and chill time (stored in the fridge).
4) How does agitation affect it? Can I bring (thereby causing sediment to stir etc.) my high volume bottles to other people's houses without being embarrassed?
5) Are different strains of yeast more susceptible/averse to gushers?
I've had varying degrees of success and failure with gushers, and though I've never ruled out infection, I'd like to know if there's a limit to how much I am calculating and planning my CO2 volumes. And if there are some best practices (other than the obvious sanitation, properly mixed and calculated sugar etc.)
I'd appreciate hearing your experiences.
Thanks!