Finlandbrews
Well-Known Member
How should I ensure in a practical way an even distribution of priming sugars while avoiding the least oxygen to come in my fermented wort?
Trying to stir in the sugar in the primary is going to stir up TONS of yeast. Unless you like a big fat yeast cake in your bottles, I would rack to a bottling bucket.
When I bottled, I would rack into a cold crash container, and simply pour bottling syrup and gelatin in, and leave it for 3 or 4 days before bottling. Brownian motion distributes all the molecules of sugar evenly during this period of time until osmotic equilibrium is reached.
What? Was this a closed system? That sugar would've most certainly fermented out in 3 or 4 days...
This is refrigerated to not much above freezing temps..........
Now that I only occasionally bottle, and only a few bottles, I simply measure sugar into each bottle with an adjustable measuring spoon I've calibrated for the job.
How big of a batch are you talking then? Are you refrigerating it before adding the sugar? How long does it take for the entire batch to actually get to freezing temps?
I can admit that in theory this could work. But while the beer is still relatively warm, the yeast will consume the sugars pretty quickly. Even at cold temps, they will continue to work, albeit very slowly. If the beer was already cold, I could imagine that they wouldn't put a big dent in the amount of sugar you added. But if you started chilling it after adding the sugar, and you're talking about a 5 gallon batch, then I could see them consuming quite a bit before they drop out of suspension. So do you compensate for that fact in the amount you add?
Now that is a piece of gear I would like to see a photo of.
Here is a photo of it.... They can be had at the local dollar store. You can adjust them to whatever amount you want. I had to modify mine a bit so it would adjust for the amount I want, but now it does a very consistent and accurate job. Another possibility would be a reloader's charge bar. Adjust the charge of sugar, and run each bottle under the hopper and pull the lever........... If you reload it's an obvious solution ;-) .......... charge, fill, cap....
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ingl6ihovqhvucj/spoon.jpeg?dl=0
H.W.
Now that is a piece of gear I would like to see a photo of.