Hey, I am brewing a Schneider Weisse clone and as mentioned in their recipe I saved some wort (made two 5 gallon batches) to re-inoculate and pitch to condition it in the keg. This is my first time kegging and also kraeusening beer, but hey, he who dares... wins, right? I pitched the second wort with the yeast as it was in high kraeusen and let the kegs sit untouched for a week at 70 degrees or so.
So now one week later, one keg had a faulty o-ring, so no carbonation. The other. I have never heard of something like this before. I pulled the pressure release vale and got a face full of foam. The pressure just won't stop. I've put both keg in the fridge to cool things down in hopes that the first, I can force pressurize and the second, well in hopes that the second won't explode.
I am writing to find the answer to three question basically
1) How should I continue in force carbonating the un-bubbly keg?
2) What should I do with the uber-pressure keg? Should I be worried about failure or should I leave it until this weekend when I am serving it at a wedding?
3) Does anyone have any experience with this kind of priming/carbonation and could give me tips for next time I am repeating this procedure?
I have tasted both beers and they are GREAT! Not too estery
and not too dry, but I need BUBBLES!
Please Help,
Dimitris
So now one week later, one keg had a faulty o-ring, so no carbonation. The other. I have never heard of something like this before. I pulled the pressure release vale and got a face full of foam. The pressure just won't stop. I've put both keg in the fridge to cool things down in hopes that the first, I can force pressurize and the second, well in hopes that the second won't explode.
I am writing to find the answer to three question basically
1) How should I continue in force carbonating the un-bubbly keg?
2) What should I do with the uber-pressure keg? Should I be worried about failure or should I leave it until this weekend when I am serving it at a wedding?
3) Does anyone have any experience with this kind of priming/carbonation and could give me tips for next time I am repeating this procedure?
I have tasted both beers and they are GREAT! Not too estery

Please Help,
Dimitris