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Coopers Carbonation VS Priming Sugar

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RickT

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I'm finishing up my 2nd batch of beer. I used priming sugar the first batch.
The beer is a midwest cream stout kit with an extra 3 lbs of dark malt added.

I bought some coopers carbonation drops.

Do I still add the priming sugar? It would seem that you do not add it, too much carbonation?

I've read to add any where from 1 to 2 drops in a 12 ounce bottle which is correct? I don't want bottle bombs!

I'm also finishing up my 2nd batch of blackberry wine and was thinking about trying to bottle a few of those bottles as champagne/sparkling wine, using the coopers carbonation drops.

How many should I use in a 750 ml champagne bottle with cork and wired hood.

Any help will be appreciated.

Thanks,
 
sugar in drop form or priming sugar will all give you CO2 in the bottle. You either prime or use the drops, not both.

I keg and use the drops to just bottle a few bottles to use up the leftover beer in the carboy after I fill my keg. One drop/bottle works well for me.
 
OK so - for your first question, pick one method or the other, not both. Personally I always think it's easier to batch prime, but using the tabs is good for situations as you describe, where only a part of the bottles get the tablets.

As for how many, one or two - I don't know, I've never used them. Are there instructions on the bag? But I can throw some math at the wall and see what sticks:

Five oz sugar for a batch of 50 bottles (I like simple round numbers) gives you 0.10 ounces of priming sugar per bottle. This is about 2.8 grams. How much do the tablets weigh?

A 750 ml bottle is a little more than twice a 12 ounce bottle (330 ml). None of this is rocket surgery, there are ample fudge factors. If you get it close, you'll be fine.

Cheers!
 
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