I have kegged and tried force carbing a beer at a temperature of 58-62, had the psi set at 18 (looking to get 2.0-2.3 volumes of CO2). Recently over the past day it's chilled down outside so I put the keg outside and lowered the PSI to compensate for the colder temperatures. Yesterday I lowered the psi to 10 for filling a bottle, and opened it later and it was bubbly; as in the beer didn't lose carbonation (I have the blichman beer gun). I left the keg at 10 psi... Today I tried some and the beer is rather flat. It lost some carbonation. The keg is now around 40f.
I think this post/thread has answered my question as to why the beer was carbonated at first, then went flat:
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=202212
Any other thoughts as to force carbing beer when it's warm at high PSI, then serving it cold? I don't have a keezer/fridge to cool down beer at the moment.
Will I lose carbonation if I bottle the beer warm, put in the fridge and serve cold? How can I ensure that the beer in the keg maintains carbonation? Do I have to adjust the PSI back to force carb level after everytime I serve beer?
I think this post/thread has answered my question as to why the beer was carbonated at first, then went flat:
Well, it's not a mystery at all. If you lower the psi to 10, but the beer is fully carbed at 12 psi, it'll gradually lose some carbonation.
My system is balanced so that at 39 degrees, 12 psi keeps my beers perfectly carbonated.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=202212
Any other thoughts as to force carbing beer when it's warm at high PSI, then serving it cold? I don't have a keezer/fridge to cool down beer at the moment.
Will I lose carbonation if I bottle the beer warm, put in the fridge and serve cold? How can I ensure that the beer in the keg maintains carbonation? Do I have to adjust the PSI back to force carb level after everytime I serve beer?