i sometimes pitch a little more yeast (typically champagne yeast) at bottling; but only for big beers (9%+) that have been bulk aging for more than 6 weeks. i've never repitched for beers that are less than a month old, i.e. 98% of my beers. there should be plenty of yeast left to take care of carbonation.Does any one here regularly pitch additional yeast at bottling time?
next time i would suggest rehydrating the yeast first with water, then a little sugar or wort to the yeast slurry to get them munching sugar. by pitching dry yeast directly into the beer, you're asking them to rehydrate with alcohol - not a good thing for them. you also want to get the yeast active and in "sugar eating" mode. when added to an alcoholic, low pH enviro those that don't die are likely to go to sleep and wait for conditions to get more hospitable...
i sometimes pitch a little more yeast (typically champagne yeast) at bottling; but only for big beers (9%+) that have been bulk aging for more than 6 weeks. i've never repitched for beers that are less than a month old, i.e. 98% of my beers. there should be plenty of yeast left to take care of carbonation.
I'd never pour them back, add yeast and rebottle. That would ruin the beer by oxidizing it. If anything, I"d wait a bit longer. If, after 2 more months, it's still flat, I'd gently open a bottle, drop in a grain of yeast by hand, and recap.
I wouldn't store the beer at 85+ degrees- that is too warm for good flavor. Try to store them in the house if you can.
Does any one here regularly pitch additional yeast at bottling time?