YES I'm new to brewing, but in my quest to find out more about the brewing process and thinking about what is going on in the process, I came to a question that I can't find the answer to.
I bottle because I don't have kegging ability yet. So I've looked at some recipes that have these really long fermentation steps, when I bottle and I put in the priming sugar I'm depending on the yeast to create the carbonation in the bottle, so is there a point that if you leave the beer in the secondary fermenter to long that the yeast could be unable to bounce back and get the desired carbonation?
I bottle because I don't have kegging ability yet. So I've looked at some recipes that have these really long fermentation steps, when I bottle and I put in the priming sugar I'm depending on the yeast to create the carbonation in the bottle, so is there a point that if you leave the beer in the secondary fermenter to long that the yeast could be unable to bounce back and get the desired carbonation?