let's say my beer is COLD (cold crashed). Does it affect the amount of Corn Sugar I need too prime my bottles?
No. You still use the normal amount of priming sugar. I use about 4 ounces for a five gallon batch.
I was under the impression that a beer that is cold crashed might contain a higher amount of residual CO2 in it, therefore possibly creating an over-carb condition if the Co2 in solution isn't accounted for when adding priming sugar.
Of course how much residual CO2 is left in solution depends on whether the homebrewer degassed it before cold crashing.
I don't have any information or chart for use in comparing how much this residual CO2 might contribute to a higher-than-desired carbonation in the beer at the end.
No. You still use the normal amount of priming sugar. I use about 4 ounces for a five gallon batch.
I think that's only if CO2 was generated by yeast activity after the peak temperature was reached.I was under the impression that a beer that is cold crashed might contain a higher amount of residual CO2 in it, therefore possibly creating an over-carb condition if the Co2 in solution isn't accounted for when adding priming sugar.